Vaccine for Falciparum Malaria

ABSTRACT

The invention provides compositions and methods for preventing or reducing the severity of malaria.

REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/361,573 filed on May 29, 2014, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,662,379, which is a national stage application, filed under 35 U.S.C. §371, of International Application No. PCT/US2012/067404 filed on Nov. 30, 2012, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/566,365, filed Dec. 2, 2011 and U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/641,445, filed May 2, 2012, the contents of each are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.

STATEMENT AS TO FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH

This invention was made with government support under Grant No. 1R01AI076353 awarded by the National Institutes of Health. The government has certain rights in the invention.

INCORPORATION OF SEQUENCE LISTING

The contents of the text file named “21486-607001WO_ST25.txt”, which was created on Jan. 16, 2013 and is 232 KB in size, are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates generally to the field of malaria vaccines.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Malaria is a mosquito-borne infectious disease caused by a parasite. At least four species of malaria parasites can infect humans under natural conditions: Plasmodium falciparum (P. falciparum), P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae. The first two species cause the most infections worldwide. P. vivax and P. ovale have dormant liver stage parasites (hypnozoites) that can reactivate (or “relapse”) and cause malaria several months or years after the infecting mosquito bite; consequently, these species can be difficult to detect in infected individuals. Severe disease is largely caused by P. falciparum while the disease caused by P. vivax, P. ovale, and P. malariae is generally a milder disease that is rarely fatal.

In humans, the parasites grow and multiply first in the liver cells and then in the red blood cells. In the blood, successive broods of parasites grow inside the red cells and destroy them, releasing daughter parasites (merozoites) that continue the cycle by invading other red cells. The blood stage parasites cause the symptoms of malaria. When certain forms of blood stage parasites, gametocytes, are picked up by a female Anopheles mosquito during a blood meal, they start another, different cycle of growth and multiplication in the mosquito. After 10-18 days, the parasites are found as sporozoites in the mosquito's salivary glands. When the Anopheles mosquito takes a blood meal from another human, the sporozoites are injected with the mosquito's saliva and start another human infection when they parasitize the liver cells.

Infection with malaria parasites can result in a wide variety of symptoms, typically including fever and headache, in severe cases progressing to coma or death. There were an estimated 225 million cases of malaria worldwide in 2009. An estimated 781,000 people died from malaria in 2009 according to the World Health Organization's 2010 World Malaria Report, accounting for 2.23% of deaths worldwide. Ninety percent of malaria-related deaths occur in sub-Saharan Africa, with the majority of deaths being young children. Plasmodium falciparum, the most severe form of malaria, is responsible for the vast majority of deaths associated with the disease. Children suffer the greatest morbidity and mortality from malaria, yet this age group has not been targeted at the identification stage of vaccine development. Of the 100 vaccine candidates currently under investigation, more than 60% are based on only four parasite antigens—a fact that has caused considerable concern. New antigen candidates are urgently needed.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The vaccine of the invention successfully and surprisingly elicits an immune response that blocks the Schizont rupture of RBCs (parasite egress from RBCs), therefore protecting vaccinated individuals from severe malaria. The vaccines elicit a strong antibody response to the vaccine antigen, such as PfSEP1 or PfSEP-1A. Due to the permeability of parasitized red blood cells (RBCs) at the later stages of schizogony, antibodies gain access into the infected RBCs. Antibodies to the vaccine antigen, e.g., a Schizont Egress Protein (SEP) such as PfSEP-1A (SEQ ID NO:2, and other antigenic fragments of the whole protein PfSEP-1 (SEQ ID NO:3)) decrease parasite replication by at least 10% (e.g., 20, 40, 60%, 70% or more) by arresting schizont rupture.

Accordingly, the invention features a vaccine for preventing or reducing the severity of malaria comprising a composition that leads to inhibition of parasite egress from red blood cells or inhibits parasite egress. For example, the composition comprises a purified polypeptide comprising the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:2 or a purified nucleic acid encoding a gene product that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:2. The vaccine contains one or more compositions of a class of proteins that are involved in schizont egress such as PfSEP-1/1A (SEQ ID NO:3, 2, respectively), Pb SEP-1/1A (SEQ ID NO:67, 68, respectively), PfCDPK5 (SEQ ID NO:47), SERA5 (SEQ ID NO:70, 72), PfSUB1 (SEQ ID NO:74), or PfPKG (SEQ ID NO:76). An immune response elicited by immunization with these vaccine antigens inhibits schizont egress. For example, the composition comprises a purified antigen that elicits an anti-PfSEP-1 antibody response. Alternatively, a passive immunization approach is used. In the latter case, the composition comprises a purified antibody that specifically binds to one or more of the vaccine antigens that are involved in schizont egress (listed above). For example, the composition comprises an anti-PfSEP-1 antibody or antigen binding fragment thereof. Thus, a method for preventing or reducing the severity of malaria is carried out by administering to a subject a composition that inhibits parasite egress from red blood cells.

The invention also includes a vaccine for preventing or reducing the severity of malaria comprising a polypeptide composition, wherein the polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO: 2, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30, 34, 38, 42, and 46, 66 and 72 (antigenic polypeptides or protein fragments). A vaccine for preventing or reducing the severity of malaria comprising a polypeptide composition comprising whole protein antigens such as proteins comprising the following amino acid sequences: SEQ ID NO: 3, 8, 11, 15, 19, 22, 27, 31, 35, 39, 43, 47, 67, 70, 74, and/or 76.

In a preferred embodiment, the invention features an isolated peptide comprising a peptide having at least 90%, 95% or 99% identity with the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2; a peptide encoded by a nucleic acid sequence having at least 90%, 95% or 99% identity with the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, or a fragment thereof in a vaccine composition for treatment or prevention of P. falciparum malaria. Alternatively, the isolated peptide of the present invention can be a peptide of SEQ ID NO: 3, a peptide encoded by a nucleic acid of SEQ ID NO: 4, or a fragment thereof.

The present invention also features an isolated nucleic acid sequence comprising a nucleic acid sequence having at least 90%, 95% or 99% identity with the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 4, or any fragment thereof in a vaccine composition for treatment or prevention of P. falciparum malaria.

Antigens for use in a malaria vaccine include one or more of the following polypeptides (or fragments thereof) that elicit a clinically relevant decrease in the severity of the disease or that reduce/prevent infection or spread of parasites, reduce or inhibit parasite egress from a red blood cell (RBC), reduce or inhibit gametocyte egress (thereby reducing/inhibiting human→mosquito transmission), elicit a parasite-specific antibody or cellular immune response or nucleotides encoding such polypeptides/fragments: SEQ ID NO: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 28, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and/or 76. For example, the vaccine composition comprises polypeptides (or nucleic acids encoding them) comprising the following sequences: SEQ ID NO: 2, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30, 34, 38, 42, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and/or 76.

Also provided herein is a vector or a host cell expressing one or more isolated peptides or one or more isolated nucleic acid sequences described herewith.

Another aspect of the present invention relates to a vaccine composition. The vaccine composition contains one or more isolated peptides or one or more isolated nucleic acid sequences described herewith. The peptide vaccine may also contain an adjuvant. Exemplary adjuvants include aluminum salts, such as aluminum phosphate and aluminum hydroxide. Another exemplary adjuvant is an oil adjuvant such as the Montanide ISA series, e.g., ISA 50 V2 or ISA 720 VG. The DNA vaccine contains a eukaryotic vector to direct/control expression of the antigen in the subject to be treated.

The vaccine of the present invention provides a new regimen in treating or preventing P. falciparum malaria in a subject. Accordingly, the present invention further provides a method of treating or preventing P. falciparum malaria in a subject in need by administering the vaccine to the subject. Preferably, the subject is a child under 5 years of age. More preferably, the subject is at least about 6-8 weeks of age. The vaccine is also suitable for administration to older children or adults. The vaccine can be administered orally, parenterally, intraperitoneally, intravenously, intraarterially, transdermally, sublingually, intramuscularly, rectally, transbuccally, intranasally, liposomally, via inhalation, vaginally, intraoccularly, via local delivery by catheter or stent, subcutaneously, intraadiposally, intraarticularly, intrathecally, or in a slow release dosage form. Preferably, the vaccine is administered intramuscularly. The dosing regimen that can be used in the methods of the invention includes, but is not limited to, daily, three times weekly (intermittent), two times weekly, weekly, or every 14 days. Alternatively, dosing regimen includes, but is not limited to, monthly dosing or dosing every 6-8 weeks. The vaccine of the present invention can be administered intramuscularly once every two weeks for 1, 2, 3, 4, or more times alone or in combination with 1, 2, 3, 4, or more additional vaccines in a subject, preferably a human subject. One exemplary additional vaccine contains an inhibitor of parasite liver invasion, such as RTS,S (Mosquirix). Another exemplary additional vaccine contains an inhibitor of parasite red blood cell invasion, such as MSP-1. The vaccine can be made by any known method in the art.

Also provided herein are an antibody that specifically binds to an antigen comprising the isolated peptide of the present invention and a method of treating P. falciparum malaria in a subject in need of by administering a therapeutically effective amount of such antibody to the subject. The P. falciparum malaria can be acute P. falciparum malaria.

Also provided herein is a method of treating P. falciparum malaria in a subject in need of by administering a therapeutically effective amount of an antibody described herewith to the subject. Preferably, the antibody is a purified monoclonal antibody, e.g., one that has been raised to and is specific for the protein of SEQ ID NO:2. For example, the monoclonal antibody is a humanized antibody. The treatment can be initiated at an early stage after the appearance of recrudescent parasites. The symptoms of the subject may be mild or absent and parasitemia is low but increasing, for example from range 4,000-10,000/ul. Alternative, the subject may have fever <38.5° C. without any other accompanying symptom. The subject can be a child under 10 years of age. The subject can also be an elder child or an adult. In one example, the subject is characterized as suffering from acute P. falciparum malaria but has not responded to treatment with anti-malarial drugs. In this passive immunity approach, the purified humanized monoclonal antibody that binds specifically to the protein of SEQ ID NO:2 is administered to the subject to kill the infective agent and/or inhibit RBC invasion.

The antibody can be administered orally, parenterally, intraperitoneally, intravenously, intraarterially, transdermally, sublingually, intramuscularly, rectally, transbuccally, intranasally, liposomally, via inhalation, vaginally, intraoccularly, via local delivery by catheter or stent, subcutaneously, intraadiposally, intraarticularly, intrathecally, or in a slow release dosage form. Preferably, the antibody is administered intravenously or intramuscularly. For example, the antibody is administered in 1-2 gram amounts, 1, 2, 3, or 4 times. The dosing regimen that can be used in the methods of the invention includes, but is not limited to, daily, three times weekly (intermittent), two times weekly, weekly, or every 14 days. Alternatively, dosing regimen includes, but is not limited to, monthly dosing or dosing every 6-8 weeks. The antibody of the present invention can be administered intravenously once, twice or three times alone or in combination with 1, 2, 3, 4, or more additional therapeutic agents in a subject, preferably a human subject. The additional therapeutic agent is, for example, one, two, three, four, or more additional vaccines or antibodies, an antimalarials artemisinin-combination therapy, or an immunotherapy. Any suitable therapeutic treatment for malaria may be administered. The additional vaccine may comprise an inhibitor of parasite liver invasion or an inhibitor of parasite RBC invasion. Such additional vaccines include, but are not limited to, anti-RBC invasion vaccines (MSP-1), RTS,S (Mosquirix), NYVAC-Pf7, CSP, and [NANP]19-5.1. The antibody of the invention can be administered prior to, concurrently, or after other therapeutic agents.

Amounts effective for this use will depend on, e.g., the antibody composition, the manner of administration, the stage and severity of P. falciparum malaria being treated, the weight and general state of health of the patient, and the judgment of the prescribing physician, but generally range for the treatment from about 10 mg/kg (weight of a subject) to 300 mg/kg, preferably 20 mg/kg-200 mg/kg.

The present invention further provides a kit for determining the presence of antibody to P. falciparum in a sample obtained from a subject. A “sample” is any bodily fluid or tissue sample obtained from a subject, including, but is not limited to, blood, blood serum, urine, and saliva. The kit contains an antigen or an antibody of the present invention and optionally one or more reagents for detection.

The kit may also contain a sample collection means, storage means for storing the collected sample, and for shipment. The kit further comprises instructions for use or a CD, or CD-ROM with instructions on how to collect sample, ship sample, and means to interpret test results. The kit may also contain an instruction for use to diagnose malaria or a receptacle for receiving subject derived bodily fluid or tissue.

The kit may also contain a control sample either positive or negative or a standard and/or an algorithmic device for assessing the results and additional reagents and components. The kit may further comprise one or more additional compounds to generate a detectable product.

A “vaccine” is to be understood as meaning a composition for generating immunity for the prophylaxis and/or treatment of diseases. Accordingly, vaccines are medicaments which comprise antigens and are intended to be used in humans or animals for generating specific defense and protective substance by vaccination.

A “subject” in the context of the present invention is preferably a mammal. The mammal can be a human, non-human primate, mouse, rat, dog, cat, horse, or cow, but are not limited to these examples. A subject can be male or female. A subject can be a child or an adult. A subject can be one who has been previously diagnosed or identified as having malaria, and optionally has already undergone, or is undergoing, a therapeutic intervention for the malaria. Alternatively, a subject can also be one who has not been previously diagnosed as having malaria, but who is at risk of developing such condition, e.g. due to infection or due to travel within a region in which malaria is prevalent. For example, a subject can be one who exhibits one or more symptoms for malaria.

A subject “at risk of developing malaria” in the context of the present invention refers to a subject who is living in an area where malaria is prevalent, such as the tropics and subtropics areas, or a subject who is traveling in such an area. Alternatively, a subject at risk of developing malaria can also refer to a subject who lives with or lives close by a subject diagnosed or identified as having malaria.

As used herein, an “isolated” or “purified” nucleotide or polypeptide is substantially free of other nucleotides and polypeptides. Purified nucleotides and polypeptides are also free of cellular material or other chemicals when chemically synthesized. Purified compounds are at least 60% by weight (dry weight) the compound of interest. Preferably, the preparation is at least 75%, more preferably at least 90%, and most preferably at least 99%, by weight the compound of interest. For example, a purified nucleotides and polypeptides is one that is at least 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 98%, 99%, or 100% (w/w) of the desired nucleic acid or polypeptide by weight.

Purity is measured by any appropriate standard method, for example, by column chromatography, thin layer chromatography, or high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis. The nucleotides and polypeptides are purified and used in a number of products for consumption by humans as well as animals, such as companion animals (dogs, cats) as well as livestock (bovine, equine, ovine, caprine, or porcine animals, as well as poultry). A purified or isolated polynucleotide (ribonucleic acid (RNA) or deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)) is free of the genes or sequences that flank it in its naturally-occurring state. For example, the DNA is a cDNA. “Purified” also defines a degree of sterility that is safe for administration to a human subject, e.g., lacking infectious or toxic agents.

Similarly, by “substantially pure” is meant a nucleotide or polypeptide that has been separated from the components that naturally accompany it. Typically, the nucleotides and polypeptides are substantially pure when they are at least 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95%, or even 99%, by weight, free from the proteins and naturally-occurring organic molecules with they are naturally associated.

By the terms “effective amount” and “therapeutically effective amount” of a formulation or formulation component is meant a sufficient amount of the formulation or component to provide the desired effect. For example, “an effective amount” of a vaccine is an amount of a compound required to blocking red blood cells (RBCs) rupture, block egress of parasites from RBCs, block gametocyte egress, or elicit an antibody or cellular immune response to the vaccine antigen(s). Ultimately, the attending physician or veterinarian decides the appropriate amount and dosage regimen.

The terms “treating” and “treatment” as used herein refer to the administration of an agent or formulation to a clinically symptomatic individual afflicted with an adverse condition, disorder, or disease, so as to effect a reduction in severity and/or frequency of symptoms, eliminate the symptoms and/or their underlying cause, and/or facilitate improvement or remediation of damage. The terms “preventing” and “prevention” refer to the administration of an agent or composition to a clinically asymptomatic individual who is susceptible or predisposed to a particular adverse condition, disorder, or disease, and thus relates to the prevention of the occurrence of symptoms and/or their underlying cause.

The transitional term “comprising,” which is synonymous with “including,” “containing,” or “characterized by,” is inclusive or open-ended and does not exclude additional, unrecited elements or method steps. By contrast, the transitional phrase “consisting of” excludes any element, step, or ingredient not specified in the claim. The transitional phrase “consisting essentially of” limits the scope of a claim to the specified materials or steps and permits those that do not materially affect the basic and the characteristic(s) of the claimed invention.

Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of the preferred embodiments thereof, and from the claims. Unless otherwise defined, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. Although methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of the present invention, suitable methods and materials are described below. All publications, patent applications, patents, Genbank/NCBI accession numbers, and other references mentioned herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety. In the case of conflict, the present specification, including definitions, will control. In addition, the materials, methods, and examples are illustrative only and not intended to be limiting.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIGS. 1A-C are bar graphs showing that anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies generated by DNA vaccination inhibit parasite growth/invasion by 58-65% across 3 parasite strains in vitro. Ring stage 3D7 (FIG. 1A), W2 (FIG. 1B) and D10 (FIG. 1C) parasites were synchronized three times using sorbitol, plated at 0.3-0.4% parasitemia, and cultured to obtain mature trophozoites. Mature trophozoites were cultured in the presence of anti-PfSEP-1 mouse sera (1:10 dilution). Negative controls included no mouse sera and pre-immune mouse sera (1:10 dilution). Sera was heat inactivated and dialyzed prior to use. Parasites were cultured for 24 hrs and ring stage parasites were enumerated by microscopic examination. Bars represent the mean of 5 independent replicates with each replicate performed in triplicate. Error bars represent SEMs. P<0.009 for comparison between pre and post immune mouse sera by non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test.

FIGS. 2A-D are photomicrographs showing immunolocalization of PfSEP-1. FIG. 2A) methanol fixed infected RBC were probed with mouse anti-PfSEP-1 (green) and rabbit anti-MSP-1 (red) and counterstained with DAPI to label parasite nuclei. PfSEP-1 is detected only in schizont infected RBCs, FIG. 2B) methanol fixed schizont infected RBCs do not label when probed with pre-immune mouse sera, FIG. 2C) non-permeabilized, non-fixed schizont infected RBCs were probed with mouse anti-PfSEP-1 (red) and rabbit anti-glycophorin A (green) and counterstained with DAPI to label parasite nuclei. PfSEP-1 co-localized with glycophorin A to the surface of schizont infected RBCs, FIG. 2D) non-permeabilized, non-fixed schizont infected RBCs were probed with mouse anti-PfSEP-1 (5 nm gold particles) and rabbit anti-glycophorin A (10 nm gold particles) and counterstained with uranyl acetate to enhance membrane contrast. PfSEP-1 localized to the schizont/parasitophorous vacuole membrane (black arrow), Maurer's clefts (yellow arrow) and the inner leaflet of the RBC membrane (grey arrow) while glycophorin A was confined to the outer leaflet of the RBC membrane (white arrow). Similar results were obtained when PfSEP-1 was detected with 18 nm gold particles.

FIGS. 3A-C are bar graphs showing that anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies generated by DNA vaccination inhibit schizont egress across 3 parasite strains in vitro. Ring stage 3D7 (FIG. 3A), W2 (FIG. 3B) and D10 (FIG. 3C) parasites were synchronized three times using sorbitol, plated at 3.5% parasitemia, and cultured to obtain early schizonts. Parasites were incubated in in the presence of of anti-PfSEP-1 mouse sera (1:10 dilution). Negative controls included no mouse sera and pre-immune mouse sera (1:10 dilution). Sera was heat inactivated and dialyzed prior to use. Schizonts were enumerated at 12 hrs post-treatment. Bars represent the mean of 5 independent replicates with each replicate performed in triplicate. Error bars represent SEMs. P<0.001 for comparison between pre and post immune mouse sera by non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test. Schizontemia was 5.3-6.8 fold higher in post versus pre-immune sera treated cultures.

FIG. 4A is a photograph of an electrophoretic gel, FIG. 4B is a bar graph showing antibody responses of mice vaccinated with rPbSEP-1A, and FIG. 4C is a line graph showing parasite burden. FIGS. 4A-C show that vaccination with rPbSEP-1A (recombinant SEP-1A antigenic polypeptide from P. berghei) protects mice from challenge with the infectious agent, e.g., P. berghei ANKA. FIG. 4A) rPbSEP-1A was expressed and purified from induced, clarified E. coli soluble lysates. Recombinant protein containing fractions were resolved on an 8-15% SDS PAGE-gel and stained with Gel-Code Blue. Lane 1) nickel chelate chromatography of soluble E. coli lysate, lane 2) hydrophobic interaction chromatography of lane 1, lane 3) anion exchange chromatography of lane 2. FIG. 4B) Antibody response of mice vaccinated with rPb SEP-1A. Following vaccination, mice generated high-titer anti-rPb SEP-1A IgG responses. FIG. 4C) Mice vaccinated with rPbSEP-1A had markedly reduced parasitemia (4.5 fold reduction on day 7 post challenge, P<0.002) and parasite growth rate compared to control mice. All control mice were euthanized on day 7 due to high parasitemia and associated illness.

FIG. 5 is a line graph showing the incidence of severe malaria and death in children aged 1.5-3.5 yrs of age during intervals with detectable and undetectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies (1,688 and 23,806 weeks respectively). No cases of severe malaria or death occurred during intervals with detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies. Error bars represent 95% CI adjusted for repeated measures.

FIG. 6 is a dot plot showing the relationship between parasitemia and age for all available blood smears (n=34,038). In multivariate regression analysis, both age (P<0.001) and age2 (P<0.001) were related to parsitemia. Second degree (age and age2) polynomial regression line is depicted in red. Vertical axis is truncated at 1000 parasites/200 WBC for clarity.

FIG. 7 is a diagram showing the location of SNPs in PfSEP-1. Data obtained from Plasmodb.org represent sequencing of fifteen lab and field isolates. No SNPs are reported in the region identified in the differential screening (nt 2,431-3,249).

FIGS. 8A-B are diagrams and FIG. 8C is a photograph of an electrophoretic gel. These figures show the knockdown and knockout strategy for PfSEP-1. FIG. 8A) targeting vector for knock down strategy designed to disrupt the promotor region, FIG. 8B) targeting vector for knock out strategy designed to disrupt protein coding region, FIG. 8C) Evaluation of drug resistant parasites for gene disruption. PCR amplification of drug selected parasites was carried out using: lane 1) F1 and R1 primers, lane 2) F2 and R2 primers and, lane 3) F2 and R3 primers. Only F1 and R1 primers amplified successfully indicating the presence of episomal, but not integrated vector.

FIG. 9 is a photograph of an electrophoretic gel showing the results of chromatographic purification of rPfSEP-1A. Recombinant protein containing fractions were resolved on an 8-15% SDS PAGE-gel and stained with Gel-Code Blue. Lane 1) induced lysate, lane 2) nickel chelate chromatography of lane 1, lane 3) hydrophobic interaction chromatography of lane 2, lane 4) anion exchange chromatography of lane 3, lane 5) hydroxyappatite chromatography of lane 4, and lane 6) rPfSEP-1A post-tangential flow filtration, lyophilization and reconstitution.

FIG. 10 is a bar graph showing differential recognition of rPfSEP-1A by IgG antibodies in plasma from resistant versus susceptible individuals. Antigen coated microtiter wells were probed with plasma pooled from resistant individuals (clear bars, n=11) or susceptible individuals (black bars, n=14, table Si) and bound antibody was detected with alkaline phosphatase conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG. RAMA-E is a P. falciparum merozoite protein, BSA is bovine serum albumin. Bars represent mean of 4 replicate wells. Error bars represent SEM. Recognition of rPfSEP-1A by antibodies in resistant plasma, as assessed by optical density, was 4.4 fold higher than by antibodies in susceptible plasma (Student's t-test, P<0.0002).

FIGS. 11A-B are photographs of electrophoretic gels showing that anti-Pf SEP-1 antibodies recognize a 244 kDa protein in P. falciparum extracts. Mixed stage 3D7 infected RBCs, uninfected RBCs and rPf SEP-1A were analyzed by western blot. FIG. 11A) lanes 1 and 3-3D7 infected RBC extracts, lanes 2 and 4-uninfected RBC extracts. Lanes 1 and 2-probed with anti-PfSEP-1 antisera (1:500), lanes 3 and 4-probed with pre-immune mouse sera (1:500). FIG. 11B) lanes 1 and 2-0.05 ug of rPfSEP-1A, lane 1-probed with anti-Pf SEP-1 mouse sera (1:2000), lane 2-probed with pre-immune mouse sera (1:2000).

FIGS. 12A-B are bar graphs showing that anti-rPfSEP-1A antibodies generated by protein immunization inhibit parasite growth/invasion by 72-74% across 2 parasite strains in vitro. Ring stage 3D7 (FIG. 12A), and W2 (FIG. 12B) parasites were synchronized three times using sorbitol, plated at 0.3-0.4% parasitemia, and cultured to obtain mature trophozoites. Mature trophozoites were cultured in the presence of anti-rPfSEP-1A mouse sera (1:10 dilution). Negative controls included no mouse sera and pre-immune mouse sera (1:10 dilution). Sera was heat inactivated and dialyzed prior to use. Parasites were cultured for 24 hrs and ring stage parasites were enumerated by microscopic examination. Bars represent the mean of 5 independent replicates with each replicate performed in triplicate. Error bars represent SEMs. P<0.009 for comparison between pre and post immune mouse sera by non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test.

FIGS. 13A-B are photomicrographs showing that PfSEP-1 is not detected in trophozoite infected RBCs or non-infected RBCs. Non-permeabilized, non-fixed trophozoite infected RBCs (FIG. 13A) or uninfected RBCs (FIG. 13B) were probed with mouse anti-PfSEP-1 (5 nm gold particles) and rabbit anti-glycophorin A (10 nm gold particles) and counterstained with uranyl acetate to enhance membrane contrast. PfSEP-1 was not detected in trophozoite infected RBC or uninfected RBCs, while glycophorin A was confined to the outer leaflet of the RBC membrane (white arrow).

FIG. 14A is a bar graph, and FIG. 14B is a photomicrograph showing that anti-rPfSEP-1A antibodies generated by protein immunization inhibit schizont egress across 2 parasite strains in vitro. FIG. 14A) Ring stage 3D7 (top panel), and W2 (bottom panel) parasites were synchronized three times using sorbitol, plated at 3.5% parasitemia, and cultured to obtain early schizonts. Parasites were incubated in in the presence of of anti-PfSEP-1 mouse sera (1:10 dilution). Negative controls included no mouse sera and pre-immune mouse sera (1:10 dilution). Sera was heat inactivated and dialyzed prior to use. Schizonts were enumerated at 12 hrs post-treatment. Bars represent the mean of 5 independent replicates with each replicate performed in triplicate. Error bars represent SEMs. P<0.009 for comparison between pre and post immune mouse sera by non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test. Schizontemia was 4.3-6.0 fold higher in post versus pre-immune sera treated cultures. FIG. 14B) Representative micrographs of giemsa stained blood films prepared from 3D7 cultures treated with pre-immune (top panel) and post-immune (bottom panel) sera.

FIGS. 15A-C are bar graphs. Parasite density on FIG. 15A) all blood smears and FIG. 15B) positive blood smears in children aged 2-3.5 yrs during intervals with detectable and undetectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies, after adjusting for hemoglobin phenotype, age, average prior parasitemia on all blood smears, and repeated measures. Error bars represent SEM. FIG. 15C) Incidence of mild malaria in children aged 2-3.5 yrs of age during intervals with detectable and undetectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies after adjusting for hemoglobin phenotype, age, average prior parasitemia on all blood smears, and repeated measures. Error bars represent 95% CI.

FIG. 16 is a table showing epidemiological characteristics of resistant and susceptible individuals used in differential screening assays.

FIG. 17 is a table showing epidemiological characteristics of resistant and susceptible individuals used in confirmatory ELISA assays.

FIGS. 18A-G are photomicrographs showing the results of an immunofluorescence analysis on methanol fixed infected red blood cells (iRBCs) using mouse anti-PfSEP-1 sera.

FIG. 19 is a bar graph showing growth inhibition assay. Rabbit anti-PfSEP-1 inhibits parasite growth/invasion by 68% in vitro.

FIG. 20 is a diagram showing mechanisms of schizont egress and protein-protein interactions involved in the process.

FIGS. 21A-B are diagrams showing intracellular proteins and their interactions in uninfected RBCs (FIG. 21A) compared to parasite infected RBCs (FIG. 21B). FIG. 21B illustrates the role of PfSEP in and protein-protein interactions involved in schizont egress.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The invention represents a significant breakthrough in the treatment or prevention of malaria, for example, such as P. falciparum malaria. Prior to the present invention, an effective vaccine was not yet available for malaria, although several vaccines are under development. The vaccine, SPf66, was tested extensively in endemic areas in the 1990s, but clinical trials showed it to be insufficiently effective. Other vaccine candidates, targeting the blood-stage of the parasite's life cycle, such as anti-red blood cell (RBC) invasion (P. falciparum merozoite specific protein 1 (MSP-1) antigen and P. falciparum merozoites Apical Membrane Antigen 1 (AMA-1) antigen), have also been insufficient on their own. Several potential vaccines, for example, RTS,S (also called Mosquirix) targeting the pre-erythrocytic stage are being developed. One major challenge in the field is short acting time for a vaccine due to the quick infection/life cycle of the parasite. A vaccine, such as RTS,S, functioning at pre-liver stage has only 5 minutes to act before sporazoite enters hepatocytes. Anti-RBC invasion vaccines have only 15 seconds before merozoite enters RBCs.

P. falciparum remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in developing countries and vaccines for this parasite are urgently needed. Human residents of endemic areas develop protective immunity that limits parasitemia and disease. The subject invention relates to nucleic acid and polypeptide sequences designed from P. falciparum in a vaccine composition. The vaccine antigens were identified using a differential screening strategy using sera from resistant individuals and from susceptible ones. Antigens were identified by binding to antisera from resistant individuals were further characterized. Such nucleic acid sequences and polypeptides were found to be useful for therapeutic as well as diagnostic purposes.

Polynucleotide Sequence and Encoded Polypeptides

The invention is directed in part to P. falciparum polynucleotides and polypeptides that are useful, for example, for antigens for vaccines against P. falciparum malaria.

Human residents of endemic areas develop protective immunity that limits parasitemia and disease, and naturally acquired human immunity provides an attractive model for vaccine antigen identification. Plasma samples and parasitologic data collected during a longitudinal birth cohort study in Muheza, Tanzania (TZN) were used to identify previously unknown P. falciparum antigens associated with resistance during early life. The antigens were then validated as targets of antibodies associated with resistance to parasitemia in a large cohort of young children.

Using plasma obtained from maximally resistant and susceptible members of the Muheza cohort, parasite antigens recognized by host antibodies that mediate resistance to parasitemia were identified.

750,000 phage from a 3D7 based blood stage P. falciparum library were differentially screened using pooled plasma from the resistant and susceptible individuals. Three clones that are uniquely recognized by antibodies in the plasma of resistant but not susceptible pools were identified. These clones encode MSP-7 (MSP-7 nts 200-1,052), a unique hypothetical gene on Ch10 (Chromosome #10 bp 901175 to 900359), and a unique hypothetical gene on Ch11 (Chromosome #11 nts. 1333936 to 1335849). The gene on Ch11 has the gene ID of PF10_0212a.

Clone #2: Plasmodb.org designation: Gene PF10 0212a (Version 9.2) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone  AACGAGGATAGAGGAATATACGATGAATTATTAGAAAATGATATGTGTGATTTATACAATTTAAAAAT GCATGATTTGCATAATTTAAAATCCTATGATTTTGGATTATCTAAAGATTTATTAAAAAAGGATATTTT TATATATAGTAATAATTTGAAAAATGATGATATGGATGATGATGATAATAATAATATGAATGATATTG CTATAGGTGAAAATGTAATATATGAAAATGATATACATGAAAATAATATAGATGATAATGATATGTAT AATAATTACGTGAATGGAAATGATTTATATATTAACAATATGCAGGATGATGCCATGGACGATATTGT ATATGATGAGGAAGAAATTAAAAGCTTCCTAGATAAATTAAAATCTGATATATCAAATCAAATGAATG TAAAAAATGGAAATGTCGAAGTTACAGGAAATGGTGGTAATGAAGAAATGTCTTATATAAATAATGA TGAAAATTTACAAGCTTTTGATTTGTTAGATAATTTCCATATGGATGATTATGGTAATAATTATAATGA TAATGAAGAAGATGGGGATGGGGATGGGGATGACGATGAACAGAAGAAAAGAAAACAAAAAGAGTT ACATAATGTAAATGGAAAATTAAACTTATCAGATTTAAATGAATTAAATGTAGATGATATAAATAATA ATTTTTATATGTCAACTCCTCGAAAATCTATAGATGAACGTAAAGATACGGAATGTCAAACAGATTTT CCCTTATTAGATGTATCAAGGAATACTAATAGGACTCCTAGAAGAAAAAGTGTGGAAGTAATACTTGT AGAA (SEQ ID NO: 1) Sequence Length: 819 Amino acid sequence of Clone #2 (a.k.a., PfSEP-1A) NEDRGIYDELLENDMCDLYNLKMHDLHNLKSYDFGLSKDLLKKDIFIYSNNLKNDDMDDDDNNNMNDIA IGENVIYENDIHENNIDDNDMYNNYVNGNDLYINNMQDDAMDDIVYDEEEIKSFLDKLKSDISNQMNVKN GNVEVTGNGGNEEMSYINNDENLQAFDLLDNFHMDDYGNNYNDNEEDGDGDGDDDEQKKRKQKELHN VNGKLNLSDLNELNVDDINNNFYMSTPRKSIDERKDTECQTDFPLLDVSRNTNRTPRRKSVEVILVE  (SEQ ID NO: 2) Sequence Length: 273 Amino acid sequence of PF10_0212a(PfSEP-1) MMENKYPNELFCYINRYNINEIIENGEEKYVNEYDEDKNMSINHMNENDGICEYEIPFLL DYVDDSNKEDSEKNSLKSYLDDGASTILSKPDELENYNKQNENEFDENNNNKNNKIDQLK EKINIIIIPNKGVINNFEEILSMANRNDKNIEKKLNDRFYQICCKSIADINTHNLNKIKD LKKKKNNKGSLNIEHIDYGDIFLTIHDTLKSNNKIKGNNKTNLLHDSSYEIKKKTRRGTN IYKNPFHHRGSYLTSYENQKDIIYLNNLNNIMMDKYSNCSDSRKKEYSHFNSQEFSYDKY SMKDRMFLKNLYMKQNRLRDKRGKYHKLGDYQNIENYRKTGEHSFDCMNMSDIMHSNKMS HVNIMDHMIYKDNNNMSKLVDTINSREKDVKNYDDNFESYNNFFKNNNDEQHICLEYDDT YNLKDTVKNIIVEEEQCGKGVACICDKNEDVDDLFVSKKTNYSSNKKREDYEKVFLEDNL HLKQTPSKRTKINIIPDYYDNNRSNKSYKENEEDALFEVCGSLKNDDILYKDNKLNVINE DNIKEEDDKESVVHLDNDEDKKEEMYKDVYPNVLSCEKETIRRNEKYNKSLNSTSSFEKI DNPSEINVESKEDTEYFDLLIKKYEDTKINVYDNESLLLDLSNELREEMAKGDSNKNVNK VEDNDNKKENICHDNIMEDICHNNNVEDMYRNNNVEDMYRNNNVEDMYRNNNVEDMYRNN NVEDVCHNNNVEDVCHNNNVEDVCHNNNVEDVYHNNNVEDMYHDNNIEDVCHNNNVEDVC HNNNVEDHVNYDNEELNKKMDEMKEEKEERNEDRGIYDELLENDMCDLYNLKMHDLHNLK SYDFGLSKDLLKKDIFIYSNNLKNDDMDDDDNNNMNDIAIGENVIYENDIHENNIDDNDM YNNYVNGNDLYINNMQDDAMDDIVYDEEEIKSFLDKLKSDISNQMNVKNGNVEVTGNGGN EEMSYINNDENLQAFDLLDNFHMDDYGNNYNDNEEDGDGDGDDDEQKKRKQKELHNVNGK LNLSDLNELNVDDINNNFYMSTPRKSIDERKDTECQTDFPLLDVSRNTNRTPRRKSVEVI LVEKKLKKKKQKCMDKYTDANEDSNRRYPKRNRIKTLRYWIGERELTERNPYTGEIDVVG FSECKNLQDLSPHIIGPIEYKKIYLKNLNSNEHEENEDNNGDIIENNNGDVIENNNGDII EDNNANEKNHNNLESEGKGIVYDDVNNLHVHTNSDNSAHSKKIKGAPSRFSNTNNGRKKR RRRKFINVVNYIKKKKKKKLIKSMDNMEVTDNFKNDMSDENKQSGDENKQSGDENKQSGD ENKQSGDENKQTNNDIKQSDNDIKQSDDIYMNEDMNLFNDLNDNFDNNEYFINNGDKDSH AEEEMAIENIQSKSIEKDILNNEEQDNNNIFDIDNELIDMKDGNVDEMESDEKLKTFEKL ESLKSTTHLNNTDNCDVNLSEQTNEINYDEEKKVNKKTNHEKMKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKE KKQIDIMYKNLSRLNLNLLLPTKKKVKKSKNSFKKEEEKQKKKNKKVKKIKGINKGEKIK SNKKENKDNNNDSSTECVVEGEKGKDLHEFNKNGNLEDEQMDVDISMNISSINCESDNKN VSKEGEEEKKDIAENKEEVDKNKEEVYMDKHEMDLNNEEVYMDKNEMDLNNEEVYMDKHE MDLNNEEVYMDKHEMDLNNEEVYMDKHEMDLNKEEVYMDKHEMDLNNEEVDKENEYDENI LSDNIIYNENNSFGNNKNSFFNNTSPLKTEIINEEENSLNEMKEDINEYVEMENKLDTEK IKDSEKIGGKIEVDNKMISPINRHNFYLTILEGMNKNFPRQWNKNNITLSKNQGQIYKGR KEKKRKRSYRNDEKLLDHSILNDINISDKMDERNELLESIKSNSTINNVLEIIKYDNRKK IKKNDTNKEIIKYDNFTSKYNNKSNDIQLNGGIYINKFKLSLDMPINKLAVSSNLGPPSS IGSTEIQPIQKNFNDFKMNINVYCIRMEPHEKYSSYSHKNNLVVYIDKGEKINIIINMSK TYEKGDFFYIPRFSNFQIINDSRCDCVLYVCPLI (SEQ ID NO: 3)  Sequence Length: 2074 aa; underlined sequence corresponds to PfSEP-1A antigenic fragment. Coding Nucleotide sequence of PF10_0212a(PFSEP-1) ATGATGGAAAATAAATACCCAAATGAATTATTCTGTTATATAAATAGATATAATATAAAC GAAATAATAGAAAATGGAGAAGAGAAGTATGTAAATGAATATGATGAAGATAAGAATATG TCAATAAATCATATGAATGAAAACGATGGTATATGTGAATATGAAATACCATTTTTATTA GACTATGTGGATGATAGTAATAAAGAAGATTCAGAGAAAAATTCATTAAAGAGTTATCTC GATGATGGTGCATCCACTATCCTTTCAAAACCAGATGAACTGGAAAATTATAATAAACAA AATGAAAATGAATTTGACGAAAATAATAATAATAAAAATAATAAAATTGACCAATTGAAG GAAAAAATAAATATTATAATAATACCAAATAAAGGTGTTATAAACAATTTTGAAGAGATA TTAAGCATGGCAAATCGTAATGATAAAAATATAGAGAAAAAGTTGAATGATAGATTTTAT CAAATATGTTGTAAAAGTATAGCTGATATAAACACACACAATTTAAATAAAATTAAAGAT TTGAAAAAAAAAAAAAATAATAAAGGATCCTTAAATATTGAACATATAGATTATGGAGAT ATTTTTCTTACTATACATGATACATTAAAAAGTAATAATAAAATAAAAGGAAACAATAAA ACTAACTTATTACACGATTCTTCTTATGAAATAAAAAAGAAAACAAGAAGAGGAACAAAT ATATATAAAAATCCATTTCATCATAGAGGTTCCTATTTAACTTCGTATGAAAATCAAAAG GATATCATTTACCTTAATAATTTAAACAACATTATGATGGATAAATATAGTAATTGTAGT GATTCACGAAAAAAGGAATATTCGCATTTCAATTCGCAGGAGTTTTCATATGATAAATAT AGTATGAAAGACAGAATGTTTCTCAAAAATTTGTATATGAAACAAAATAGATTAAGAGAT AAAAGGGGGAAATATCACAAATTGGGAGATTATCAAAATATTGAAAACTATCGTAAAACG GGTGAACATAGTTTTGATTGTATGAATATGTCAGATATTATGCATTCAAATAAAATGAGC CATGTTAATATCATGGATCATATGATATATAAAGATAATAACAATATGAGCAAACTAGTA GATACAATAAATTCTCGTGAAAAGGATGTAAAAAATTATGACGATAACTTTGAAAGCTAT AATAATTTTTTTAAGAATAATAATGATGAACAACATATATGTTTGGAGTATGACGATACA TATAACTTAAAAGATACAGTTAAAAATATTATTGTTGAAGAAGAACAATGTGGTAAGGGT GTTGCTTGTATATGTGATAAGAACGAAGATGTTGACGATTTGTTTGTTTCAAAGAAAACG AATTATTCTTCTAATAAAAAAAGAGAAGATTATGAGAAAGTATTTCTTGAAGATAATTTA CATTTAAAACAAACTCCATCAAAAAGAACAAAAATTAATATAATCCCAGATTATTATGAT AACAATAGAAGTAATAAGAGTTATAAGGAAAATGAAGAGGATGCTTTGTTTGAGGTATGT GGTAGTTTAAAAAACGATGATATATTGTATAAAGATAATAAGTTGAATGTCATAAATGAA GATAATATAAAGGAAGAGGATGACAAAGAAAGTGTTGTTCATTTAGATAATGATGAGGAT AAAAAAGAAGAAATGTATAAAGATGTATATCCCAATGTATTGTCTTGTGAAAAAGAAACG ATTAGGAGGAATGAAAAGTATAACAAATCATTGAACAGTACAAGTAGCTTTGAAAAAATT GATAATCCAAGTGAAATTAATGTTGAAAGTAAGGAAGATACAGAATATTTTGATTTATTA ATAAAAAAATATGAGGATACAAAAATAAACGTATATGATAATGAATCTCTTTTATTGGAT CTTAGTAATGAGCTACGTGAAGAAATGGCCAAGGGGGATTCTAATAAAAATGTAAATAAA GTGGAAGATAATGATAATAAAAAGGAAAATATTTGTCATGATAATATCATGGAAGATATT TGTCATAATAATAACGTGGAAGATATGTATCGTAATAATAACGTGGAAGATATGTATCGT AATAATAACGTGGAAGATATGTATCGTAATAATAACGTGGAAGATATGTATCGTAATAAT AACGTGGAAGATGTTTGTCATAATAATAACGTGGAAGATGTTTGTCATAATAATAACGTG GAAGATGTTTGTCATAATAATAACGTGGAAGATGTTTATCATAATAATAACGTGGAAGAT ATGTATCATGATAATAACATTGAAGATGTTTGTCATAATAATAACGTGGAAGATGTTTGT CATAATAATAACGTGGAAGACCATGTTAATTATGATAATGAAGAATTGAATAAAAAAATG GATGAGATGAAAGAAGAAAAGGAAGAAAGAAACGAGGATAGAGGAATATACGATGAATTA TTAGAAAATGATATGTGTGATTTATACAATTTAAAAATGCATGATTTGCATAATTTAAAA TCCTATGATTTTGGATTATCTAAAGATTTATTAAAAAAGGATATTTTTATATATAGTAAT AATTTGAAAAATGATGATATGGATGATGATGATAATAATAATATGAATGATATTGCTATA GGTGAAAATGTAATATATGAAAATGATATACATGAAAATAATATAGATGATAATGATATG TATAATAATTACGTGAATGGAAATGATTTATATATTAACAATATGCAGGATGATGCCATG GACGATATTGTATATGATGAGGAAGAAATTAAAAGCTTCCTAGATAAATTAAAATCTGAT ATATCAAATCAAATGAATGTAAAAAATGGAAATGTCGAAGTTACAGGAAATGGTGGTAAT GAAGAAATGTCTTATATAAATAATGATGAAAATTTACAAGCTTTTGATTTGTTAGATAAT TTCCATATGGATGATTATGGTAATAATTATAATGATAATGAAGAAGATGGGGATGGGGAT GGGGATGACGATGAACAGAAGAAAAGAAAACAAAAAGAGTTACATAATGTAAATGGAAAA TTAAACTTATCAGATTTAAATGAATTAAATGTAGATGATATAAATAATAATTTCTATATG TCAACTCCTCGAAAATCTATAGATGAACGTAAAGATACGGAATGTCAAACAGATTTTCCA TTATTAGATGTATCAAGGAATACTAATAGGACTCCTAGAAGAAAAAGTGTGGAAGTAATA CTTGTAGAAAAAAAATTAAAAAAAAAAAAACAGAAATGTATGGATAAATATACAGATGCA AATGAGGATAGTAATAGAAGATATCCCAAAAGAAATCGAATTAAAACTTTGCGTTATTGG ATAGGAGAAAGAGAGTTAACTGAAAGAAACCCTTACACAGGAGAAATAGATGTTGTAGGA TTTAGTGAGTGTAAAAATTTGCAAGATTTGTCACCTCATATTATTGGTCCGATTGAATAT AAAAAAATATATTTGAAAAATCTTAATAGTAATGAACATGAGGAAAATGAAGATAATAAT GGAGACATTATTGAAAATAATAATGGGGACGTTATTGAAAATAATAATGGAGACATTATT GAAGATAATAATGCAAACGAAAAAAATCATAATAATCTTGAATCTGAAGGTAAGGGTATC GTATATGATGATGTAAATAATTTACATGTTCACACAAACAGTGATAATAGTGCTCATTCG AAGAAAATAAAGGGAGCCCCCAGTAGGTTTAGTAATACAAATAATGGAAGGAAGAAACGA AGAAGGAGAAAATTCATCAATGTAGTTAATTATATAAAGAAGAAGAAAAAGAAGAAACTG ATAAAAAGTATGGATAATATGGAGGTTACAGATAATTTTAAGAATGATATGAGTGATGAA AATAAACAAAGTGGTGATGAAAATAAACAAAGTGGTGATGAAAATAAACAAAGTGGTGAT GAAAATAAACAAAGTGGTGATGAAAATAAACAAACTAATAATGATATTAAACAGAGTGAT AATGATATTAAACAGAGTGATGATATTTACATGAATGAAGATATGAATTTGTTCAATGAT TTAAATGATAACTTCGATAACAATGAATATTTCATAAACAATGGTGATAAGGATTCTCAT GCTGAAGAAGAAATGGCCATAGAAAATATTCAAAGTAAAAGTATAGAAAAGGATATTTTA AATAATGAAGAGCAGGATAATAATAACATCTTTGATATTGATAATGAACTTATAGATATG AAGGATGGAAATGTAGATGAAATGGAAAGTGATGAAAAATTAAAAACTTTTGAAAAATTG GAAAGTTTGAAAAGTACAACACATTTAAACAATACCGATAATTGTGATGTAAATTTGAGT GAACAGACCAATGAAATAAATTATGATGAGGAAAAAAAAGTTAATAAAAAAACAAATCAT GAAAAAATGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGAAAGAA AAAAAACAAATAGATATTATGTACAAAAATTTGTCCAGACTTAATTTAAATTTGTTACTT CCAACCAAAAAAAAAGTTAAGAAATCGAAAAACTCATTTAAAAAAGAGGAAGAAAAACAA AAGAAGAAAAATAAAAAAGTTAAAAAAATCAAAGGTATTAACAAGGGGGAAAAAATAAAA AGTAATAAGAAAGAAAATAAGGACAATAATAATGATAGTAGTACAGAATGTGTTGTAGAA GGAGAAAAAGGAAAAGATTTACATGAGTTTAATAAAAATGGAAATCTTGAAGATGAACAA ATGGATGTTGATATTTCTATGAATATTTCAAGTATAAATTGTGAAAGTGATAATAAAAAT GTGAGTAAGGAAGGAGAGGAAGAAAAAAAAGACATAGCTGAAAACAAAGAAGAGGTGGAT AAAAACAAAGAAGAGGTATATATGGACAAACATGAGATGGATTTGAACAATGAAGAGGTA TATATGGACAAAAATGAGATGGATTTGAACAATGAAGAGGTATATATGGACAAACATGAG ATGGATTTGAACAATGAAGAGGTATATATGGACAAACATGAAATGGATTTGAACAATGAA GAGGTATATATGGACAAACATGAAATGGATTTGAACAAAGAAGAGGTATATATGGACAAA CATGAGATGGATTTGAACAATGAAGAGGTAGATAAAGAAAACGAATATGATGAAAATATA CTTAGTGATAACATAATATATAATGAAAACAATTCATTTGGAAACAATAAGAACTCTTTT TTTAATAATACAAGTCCATTAAAAACAGAAATAATAAATGAAGAGGAAAATAGTTTGAAC GAAATGAAAGAAGACATAAATGAATACGTTGAAATGGAAAACAAGTTGGATACGGAAAAA ATAAAAGATTCAGAAAAAATAGGTGGAAAAATAGAGGTAGATAATAAAATGATTTCTCCT ATTAATAGACATAATTTTTATTTAACAATTCTTGAAGGAATGAATAAGAATTTTCCTAGG CAATGGAATAAAAATAATATAACTTTATCAAAAAATCAAGGACAAATTTATAAAGGAAGG AAAGAAAAGAAAAGAAAACGTTCCTATAGAAATGATGAAAAATTACTTGATCATAGTATA TTAAATGATATCAATATAAGTGACAAAATGGATGAAAGAAATGAATTATTAGAGAGTATA AAATCTAATAGTACTATAAATAATGTATTAGAAATTATAAAATATGATAATAGGAAAAAA ATAAAGAAGAATGATACAAACAAGGAAATAATCAAATATGATAACTTCACATCTAAATAT AATAATAAAAGTAATGATATTCAATTGAATGGTGGAATATATATAAATAAATTCAAACTT TCTTTAGATATGCCTATAAATAAATTAGCGGTATCTTCAAATCTTGGACCTCCATCATCT ATAGGATCAACAGAAATACAGCCTATTCAAAAGAATTTCAACGATTTCAAAATGAATATT AACGTGTACTGTATTAGGATGGAGCCGCATGAAAAATACAGCTCATATAGCCATAAAAAT AATTTAGTTGTATATATTGATAAGGGAGAAAAAATTAACATAATAATCAACATGTCAAAG ACTTATGAAAAAGGTGATTTTTTTTACATACCTAGATTTTCTAACTTCCAAATAATTAAT GATAGCAGATGTGATTGTGTTTTATATGTTTGTCCTTTAATTTAA (SEQ ID NO: 4) Sequence Length: 6225 bp ; underlined sequence  corresponds to nucleotide sequence encoding; PfSEP-1A antigenic fragment.

The invention is also directed in part to polynucleotides and polypeptides shown in the Table below that are useful, for example, for antigens for vaccines against P. falciparum malaria.

Length Length of of Clone Gene Serial Plasmodb.org peptide Protein size size Number Clone Name GENE ID Gene Name/Function in aa aa in bp in bp 1 Clone#2 PF10_0212a PfSEP-1/Schizont 273 2074 819(2431- 6225 Version 9.2 egress 3249) 2 Clone#5 PF13_0197 MSP-7/Merozoite 284 351 852(201- 1056 surface protein/RBC 1052) invasion 3 Clone#10 PF11_0354 Schizont egress 641 2227 1923(3490- 6684 5412) 4 Clone#T108 PFB0310c MSP-4/Merozoite 79 272 238(124- 819 surface protein/RBC 361) invasion 5 Clone#T32 MAL8P1.58 Pf-PGPS/phosphatidyl 100 661 300(1023- 1986 glycerophosphate 1322) synthase 6 Clone#T9 PFE0040c MESA/Mature 153 1434 459(2080- 4305 Erythrocyte Surface 2538) Antigen 7 Clone#TL22 PFA0620c Pf-GARP/glutamic 263 673 792(1231- 2022 acid rich protein 2022) 8 Clone#TL27 PFI1780w Plasmodium exported 101 383 303(691- 1152 protein 993) 9 Clone#TL5 PFB0100c Pf- 80 654 242(1309- 1965 KAHRP/Pathogenicity, 1550) Adhesion/Knob Associated Histidine Rich Protein 10 Clone#TL16 MAL7P1.208 RAMA/Rhoptry 144 873 432(953- 2114 Associated membrane 1384) antigen/RBC invasion/DNA mismatch repair protein 11 Clone#TL45 PF07_0033 Cg4 protein/parasite 216 873 650(1764- 2622 heat shock protein 70/ 2413) protein transport 12 PF3D7 PF13_0211 Ca⁺⁺ dep. Protein 84 568 255 1707 kinase

Clone #5: MSP-7 (PF13_0197) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone #5, 852bp(Sequence 201-1,052 of gene PF13_0197) (SEQ ID NO: 5) ATTAAACAAAAAAATTGAAGAATTACAAAACAGTAAAGAAAAAAATGTACATGTAT TAATTAATGGAAATTCAATTATTGATGAAATAGAAAAAAATGAAGAAAATGATGAT AACGAAGAAAATAATGATGATGACAATACATATGAATTAGATATGAATGATGACAC ATTCTTAGGACAAAATAACGATTCACATTTTGAAAATGTTGATGATGACGCAGTAGA AAATGAACAAGAAGATGAAAACAAGGAAAAATCAGAATCATTTCCATTATTCCAAA ATTTAGGATTATTCGGTAAAAACGTATTATCAAAGGTAAAGGCACAAAGTGAAACA GATACTCAATCTAAAAATGAACAAGAGATATCAACACAAGGACAAGAAGTACAAA AACCAGCACAAGGAGGAGAATCGACATTTCAAAAAGACCTAGATAAGAAATTATAT AATTTAGGAGATGTTTTTAATCATGTAGTTGATATTTCAAACAAAAAGAACAAAATA AATCTCGATGAATATGGTAAAAAATATACAGATTTCAAAAAAGAATATGAAGACTT CGTTTTAAATTCTAAAGAATATGATATAATCAAAAATCTAATAATTATGTTTGGTCA AGAAGATAATAAGAGTAAAAATGGCAAAACGGATATTGTAAGTGAAGCTAAACATA TGACTGATATTTTCATAAAACTATTTAAAGATAAGGAATACCATGAACAATTTAAAA ATTATATTTATGGTGTTTATAGTTATGCAAAACAAAATAGTCACTTAAGTGAGAAAA AAATAAAACCAGAAGAGGAATATAAAAAATTTTTAGAATATTCATTTAATTTACTAA ACACAAT Sequence Length: 852 bp Amino acid sequence of Clone #5 (SEQ ID NO: 6) LNKKIEELQNSKEKNVHVLINGNSIIDEIEKNEENDDNEENNDDDNTYELDMNDDTFLG QNNDSHFENVDDDAVENEQEDENKEKSESFPLFQNLGLFGKNVLSKVKAQSETDTQSK NEQEISTQGQEVQKPAQGGESTFQKDLDKKLYNLGDVFNHVVDISNKKNKINLDEYGK KYTDFKKEYEDFVLNSKEYDIIKNLIIMFGQEDNKSKNGKTDIVSEAKHMTDIFIKLFKD KEYHEQFKNYIYGVYSYAKQNSHLSEKKIKPEEEYKKFLEYSFNLLNTM Sequence Length: 284 aa Amino acid sequence of MSP7 gene (PF13_0197) (SEQ ID NO: 7) MKSNIIFYFSFFFVYLYYVSCNQSTHSTPVNNEEDQEELYIKNKKLEKLKNIVSGDFVGN

Sequence Length: 351 aa Nucleic acid sequence of MSP7 gene (PF13_0197) (SEQ ID NO: 8) ATGAAGAGTAATATCATATTTTATTTTTCTTTTTTTTTTGTGTACTTATACTATGTTTC GTGTAATCAATCAACTCATAGTACACCAGTAAATAATGAAGAAGATCAAGAAGAAT TATATATTAAAAATAAAAAATTGGAAAAACTAAAAAATATAGTATCAGGAGATTTT

Clone#10 (PF11_0354) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone #10, 1923bp (Sequence3490-5412 of gene PF11_0354 (SEQ ID NO: 9) GATAATGTTAATAATAATAATAATAAAGAAAGTTGTGATAATATTAAACATATGAG AACAAAAAGTTTAAATTTTGTAAGTAGAGAATCCTATGGCGAACATAAAAGTCTAG ATGTTTACCAGGAATGTTATGTAAAAAATAATAAACTTATTAATAAGGTAAATGATA AAAAATATGAGGACAATAATAATTCCTATCTTAATGAAGATGATAACGCTAGTATG CAATTTTATGAAGAAACTAATAGTAATCCATATATTGTAGACCAGGAAAATAATAT GAAAAATTATGTCAATAATGTTTTATATAACAACAATAGCAATTATTATGTTGATTC AAAGAATTATGATAAATCTAAAGAGAATGCAGAAAATAAATCAGATGATATATTAA ATAATGAAAATATACATACCTTAAAAGATCAAAAAAAGAAAATACAAAATAATAAT GAATTCATTAGTGAACAGGCTGATATAGAAAATATAAGAAATTCTCAAGAAGAAGT ATATGAGAAAGAACACGAACCTTTGTGGGTAATAAATGCATCTAATGAAGAAAAGA AATCATATGAAGAATTGATATACAGCGATATGTCATCTAATCGTGTTACGAAAAATA AATATAGTGATATGAATAATGTTGAGGTATTATTAAATGAAGATAATTTATTAACTA CTGAAAAATACAAGGTGCAATTAGAAAAAGAAAATAAAATGATTGATATGTATGAA ACGGTAGAGGAGAATATAAATACAATTAAAACAGAAAATACGAACGACATAAATG AAGAAGTTAGAAACGAACAAAAAAGAGAAAGTATCAATCATATTAATGATACAAA TATAAATCATATAATAGATGAATATCCCAATGATACATATAATTTCATAAAAGATAT AGAATGTGTACATAACAATGAAAATAACATGTACAATTCTATTGAACAATATACATT TTATCATGATACACGTAATAATCATTTAGTTGATAAAAATAATCAAAATTTTATATT CGAAGAGGAAGGTTTAAATGAATTGAACTTTGAAGAAAAAAAGGTATATATAGAAA ATAATACCAAGGATGATCACAAGGGAGATAGCAAAACAAGTAACTTAACATCTTTA AGGAATACCATATGTAAAAGTGAAAACGATCATAATGAAAAAAATGAAAACACAT ATGTGGTTAGAAAAGGCGAAAAAGGAATTAAACGTAAGGTTTCCATGAAGAAAAG AAATGAAAAGCTAAATGAAGAAAATTATATTAATAATATATACGATAAAATGGATA ACCATAGACAAAATGATATTACAAAAAAAGAAAATGACGAAGAAAATTATATTTTG TACAACAACGTAAAGGTTAATTATGATGAATATATAGAAAATGGAAATAAAATAAA AATAACGGAAGAATCATTAAATGTCTTTTATAAAGAAAATCAAAATGAGGAAGATT CTTCTACAAAAAAGTTGAATAGTACAAGTAAAATAAAACGTGCAAACAAAGGGAA AACAAAAAAAAAGAATGTTATCACAAGGGTACATAAAACAAAACAAAAATTGAA TATGTTACAAATAGTTTTAATAAATCTTCCAAAGGTGAAAATTCAGAAATAGGAAA AATTGGAGGTAGGAGTAAATCATTATTAACACACAGCAAGAAAGTTAGTGAACGAA ATAAAAATAAAATAGAAAAAATTAATGATACAAATTCAAAGATAATAAAAGGAAA AAAGAGTAATAGCCAAAGCAAACTTGGGAAGGATACAAAAATTAGAGGGAAATCA AAAACTGGGGAATATATAAAAAATAAAGATTTAAGAAAAAATCTAACGAAAAAA ACAAAACAGTGATGGATAATATAAATACTATAAATAATTCTTCAGTATCTAACCTAA AAAGCAAAAAACATAAATTG Sequence Length: 1923 Amino acid sequence of Clone #10, (PF11_0354) (SEQ ID NO: 10) DNVNNNNNKESCDNIKHMRTKSLNFVSRESYGEHKSLDVYQECYVKNNKLINKVNDK KYEDNNNSYLNEDDNASMQFYEETNSNPYIVDQENNMKNYVNNVLYNNNSNYYVDS KNYDKSKENAENKSDDILNNENIHTLKDQKKKIQNNNEFISEQADIENIRNSQEEVYEKE HEPLWVINASNEEKKSYEELIYSDMSSNRVTKNKYSDMNNVEVLLNEDNLLTTEKYKV QLEKENKMIDMYETVEENINTIKTENTNDINEEVRNEQKRESINHINDTNINHIIDEYPND TYNFIKDIECVHNNENNMYNSIEQYTFYHDTRNNHLVDKNNQNFIFEEEGLNELNFEEK KVYIENNTKDDHKGDSKTSNLTSLRNTICKSENDHNEKNENTYVVRKGEKGIKRKVSM KKRNEKLNEENYINNIYDKMDNHRQNDITKKENDEENYILYNNVKVNYDEYIENGNKI KITEESLNVFYKENQNEEDSSTKKLNSTSKIKRANKGKTKKKNVITRVKHTKQKIEYVT NSFNKSSKGENSEIGKIGGRSKSLLTHSKKVSERNKNKIEKINDTNSKIIKGKKSNSQSKL GKDTKIRGKSKTGEYIKNKDLRKKSNEKNKTVMDNINTINNSSVSNLKSKKHKL, Sequence Length: 641 Amino acid sequence of PF11_0354 (SEQ ID NO: 11) MRSKSISYFLFFKKNKKKNDSCDSVIISSNKNLSIQLSKGEDDEKNEINEEKSYIKNEDVY KKEKLKKKKENKENNKKKDKNEVVYDYHDISNDATSDYVNNYKVYEMNTCNIKKKR ESFFKKINILQKYKNYKIRKAASTFHTIGHKTSFSGTDDEIENNQKKQKKYKIKISEWKD DKSHTFHKKNDILVFDKMDKNKKFKIDNNKNNQINIDNEERVNKNYPMATNVQNFNIK YTSIDVTNDEYIIDSNKPEGSIMSTDKKNNKLNYNNDTYDVDKSSDINKLGNIKKNKFDII TKTTHNINNNVNNIHNYMMYTNKENIKININHGNLNGREQNNYDEERKANVYEIFENA KKLEPNNININTEEHIHISEPSIPFDMKDHKNDINEKDIILKLMYNNNGIYFDDDDENHKN LLYKNKDTHVKHLNNKFNHNFIIYNDREEGVNQKHAQKKLKKKNTILNKNENEDINHN SFKRPLSNTNICYKDKDDKIKNGSNKYDILNNDYSNEHEKNKYNDHITKNKRNQSANE VKSNNNDNHNNKKNNNFNININDSYSTNINRNQNVMINDVNDVIKDPNMQENTQGDD EGGIINKYLINPIYNLFLRANEEIQNSNSTNNKLKMNNITKSYTNELQKTYKSMYDINDIS NKRKINNKDIRGTNLYNTKLCNNKLYNSNPYNMIPYNINTYNNNNNNKETCTSINIKHS ENKYPFNKSHVNSYMKNTNHLPHRNAITSNNRNNEEYEKEKEKDRNITNGNNNYLVEY NNSCIPPPLKKMIPIDGVRNKSINKLNNVTNTQRTSSVSYTNKNIDENSFDMPIINGIRESK YISNNNNINGNSIGFNSSKLDNYHHQSMNVNESYPLKNMMKNNYIEHNYDDKNNIFLV KNYEDTYSNIHNGIHENSMLKNYNLKKACTFHGYSRNHQKNMYTEENLNINQKKNYS HYHNNGTVLKPLVNTNNVAVNEFADINLSAQKRLHSLKSMGYEDKSMENYRNKIYNNI NNNNNNNNDNNIYNDNEYCQYNNSYCFDHSDLKNMFPLNHQNSKLLTHSNNKNSFFN GINVESKHHLANPEIKTFAHNSYPILNQGLINCNPLQCLGYDSNQRNKHNVVYIKKNEY

KKNISMENINKNITNEFCSMERKGTVLLSNMSIKKIDNANSCTLNEPLEENTLNYESNNN CSNSNLSKDKEKDRNILCNKYYSDEETNSLNKMYTSNIPEISNYYKEIQAINYILSNINNP NFLNSLELNDLINIEKKFINENIYINKQIIACNVKNEKSNDEMVEKNERKVDEEKGEDEQ EIKAKENNNKEENQDNENNNKEENHDNENNNKEENQDNENNNKEENQDNENNNKEE NQDNENNNKEENQKNENGIIYDSRFSIIYLEHDLIYLKKNNLKVILNVLLSNVYCFFEIKL TIILLNFFISNNCQWSFSLFPLSLINKLIHKFSLKINKKVPKYKLENMNINSPNIPYTYLFIC DGSNYLDINDNSLNNEVYENKMKLNNIIGYYHYINLNLTYYLEKVNANFVYNHHIYE, Sequence Length: 2227 Coding Nucleic acid sequence gene PF11_0354 (SEQ ID NO: 12) ATGAGATCGAAATCCATTTCGTATTTCTTATTTTTAAAAAAAACAAAAAGAAAAAT GATTCTTGTGATAGTGTCATAATATCTAGCAATAAGAATTTATCCATTCAATTATCG AAACGTGAGGATGATGAAAAAAATGAAATAAATGAGGAAAAGAGTTATATAAAAA ATGAAGATGTATATAAAAAGGAAAAATTAAAAAAGAAGAAAGAAAACAAGGAAAA TAATAAAAAGAAAGATAAAAATGAAGTAGTATATGATTATCATGACATTTCAAATG ATGCTACTAGTGATTATGTTAATAATTATAAAGTATATGAAATGAATACTTGTAATA TAAAAAAGAAGAGAGAAAGTTTTTTTAAAAAAATTAATATTTTACAAAAATATAAA AATTACAAAATTAGAAAGGCAGCTAGTACCTTTCATACCATAGGACATAAAACATC TTTTTCTGGTACAGATGATGAAATAGAAAATAATCAAAAGAAACAAAAAAAATATA AAATAAAAATTTCTGAATGGAAGGATGATAAATCACATACTTTTCATAAAAAAAAT GACATATTGGTATTTGATAAGATGGATAAAAATAAAAAATTTAAAATTGATAACAA CAAAAACAATCAAATTAATATAGATAATGAAGAAAGAGTTAATAAAAATTATCCTA TGGCTACTAATGTACAAAATTTTAATATAAAATATACATCAATAGATGTAACAAATG ACGAATATATTATAGATTCTAATAAACCTGAAGGTTCTATTATGTCTACAGATAAAA AGAATAATAAACTTAATTATAATAATGATACATATGATGTAGACAAAAGCTCTGAT ATAAATAAGTTAGGTAATATAAAAAAGAATAAATTTGATATTATTACTAAAACAAC ACATAATATTAATAATAATGTAAATAATATACATAATTATATGATGTATACAAATAA AGAAAATATAAAAATAAATATAAATCATGGAAATCTAAATGGAAGAGAACAAAAC AATTATGATGAAGAAAGGAAAGCAAATGTTTATGAAATATTTGAAAATGCAAAAAA ATTAGAACCTAATAATATTAATATCAACACAGAAGAACATATTCATATTAGTGAACC CAGCATACCATTTGATATGAAGGATCATAAAAATGATATAAATGAAAAAGATATAA TATTAAAATTGATGTATAACAATAACGGTATTTATTTTGATGATGATGATGAAAATC ACAAGAATTTATTATACAAAAATAAAGATACACATGTAAAACATTTAAATAATAAA TTTAACCATAATTTTATTATATATAATGATCGCGAAGAAGGGGTAAATCAGAAACAC GCACAAAAAAAATTAAAAAAAAAATACTATTCTTAACAAAAACGAAAATGAAG ATATTAATCATAATAGTTTCAAAAGACCTTTATCTAATACGAATATATGTTATAAGG ACAAAGATGATAAAATTAAAAATGGTTCTAATAAGTATGATATATTAAATAATGAC TATTCTAATGAACACGAAAAAAATAAATATAATGATCATATAACAAAAATAAAAG AAATCAATCAGCAAATGAAGTAAAATCTAATAATAATGATAACCACAATAATAAAA AAAATAATAATTTTAATATTAATATTAATGATTCATATTCTACAAATATAAATAGAA ACCAAAATGTGATGATAAATGATGTAAACGATGTTATTAAGGATCCAAATATGCAG GAAAATACACAAGGTGATGACGAAGGTGGTATTATAAACAAATATTTAATTAACCC TATTTACAATTTTATTTCTACGTGCTAATGAAGAAATACAAAATTCAAATAGTACAAA CAATAAATTAAAAATGAATAATATAACAAAAAGTTATACAAACGAACTACAAAAGA CATATAAAAGTATGTACGATATAAATGATATATCAAATAAGAGAAAATTAATAAT AAAGATATACGTGGAACTAATTTGTATAACACCAAATTATGTAATAATAAATTATAT AATTCGAATCCATATAATATGATTCCATATAATATAAACACATATAATAATAATAAT CTTCAATAAATCTCATGTAAACTCATATATGAAAATACAAATCATCTTCCTCATAG AAATGCGATTACATCAAATAATAGAAACAATGAAGAATATGAGAAAGAAAAAGAA AAAGATCGTAACATTACTAATGGGAACAATAATTATTTGGTTGAATATAATAATTCT TGTATACCTCCACCACTCAAAAAAATGATACCAATAGATGGTGTGAGAAATAAAAG TATAAATAAATTAAATAATGTAACTAATACGCAACGTACATCAAGTGTTTCATATAC GAATAAGAATATTGATGAGAATTCGTTTGATATGCCTATAATAAATGGAATAAGAG AATCTAAATATATAAGTAATAATAATAATATTAATGGTAATTCCATTGGTTTTAATT CATCTAAGTTAGATAATTATCATCACCAATCTATGAATGTGAATGAATCTTATCCTC TAAAAATATGATGAAAAATAATTATATTGAACATAATTATGATGATAAAAATAAT ATTTTCCTTGTTAAAAATTATGAAGATACATATTCAAATATTCATAATGGCATACAT GAAAATAGCATGCTAAAAAATTATAATTTAAAAAAGCGTGCACTTTTCATGGGTA CTCTAGAAATCACCAAAAAAATATGTATACGGAAGAAAATTTAAATATTAATCAAA AAAAGAATTATAGTCATTATCATAATAATGGAACGGTATTAAAACCTTTGGTAAATA CTAATAATGTTGCAGTGAACGAATTTGCAGATATTAATTTATCGGCTCAAAAAAGAT TACATAGTTTAAAAAGTATGGGGTACGAGGATAAGAGTATGGAAAATTACAGAAAC AAAATATACAACAACATCAATAATAATAATAATAATAATAATGATAATAATATATA TAATGATAATGAATATTGTCAGTATAATAATAGTTATTGTTTCGATCATAGTGATTT AAAAAATATGTTTCCATTAAATCATCAGAATAGCAAGTTATTAACACATAGTAATAA TAAAAATTCATTTTTTAACGGAATAAATGTAGAATCGAAACATCATTTAGCAAATCC TGAAATAAAAACATTTGCACACAATAGTTATCCTATATTAAATCAAGGTTTAATAAA TTGTAACCCCTTACAATGCTTGGGTTATGATTCAAATCAAAGGAATAAGCATAATGT AGTATACATAAAAAAAAATGAATACCTTAATAAAAACATTGGCTCTATTATAAATG TTCTTAAAAGAGAAGGACTAAGAAAAATTTCTACACATAATGGAAAATTCGAATCA

AAAATATATCTATGGAAAATATAAATAAAAATATAACAAATGAATTTTGTTCTATGG AAAGAAAAGGAACCGTTCTATTATCTAATATGAGTATTAAGAAGATTGATAATGCA AATAGTTGTACATTAAATGAACCATTAGAGGAAAATACCTTAAATTATGAAAGTAA TAATAACTGTAGTAATAGTAATTTATCTAAGGATAAAGAAAAAGATAGAAATATAT TGTGTAATAAATATTATAGTGATGAGGAAACAAACTCTTTAAACAAAATGTATACAT CGAATATACCAGAAATAAGTAATTATTATAAGGAAATTCAAGCAATTAATTACATA TTAAGTAATATTAATAATCCAAATTTTTAAATTCCCTCGAACTGAATGATTTAATA AATATTGAAAAAAAATTTATTAACGAAAATATATATATTAATAAGCAGATAATAGC CTGTAATGTAAAAAATGAAAATCAAATGATGAGATGGTCGAGAAAAATGAACGC AAAGTGGATGAAGAAAAAGGAGAAGACGAACAAGAAATAAAAGCAAAGGAAAAT AATAATAAAGAAGAAAACCAAGATAATGAAAATAATAATAAAGAAGAAAACCATG ATAATGAAAATAATAATAAAGAAGAAAATCAAGATAATGAAAATAATAATAAAGA AGAAAACCAAGATAATGAAAATAATAATAAAGAAGAAAATCAAGATAATGAAAAT AATAATAAAGAAGAAAACCAAAAAAATGAAAATGGTATTATTTATGATAGCAGGTT TAGTATTATCTATTTAGAACACGATTTAATATATTTAAAAAAAAATAATTTAAAAGT GATACTTAATGTTTTGCTGTCAAATGTGTATTGCTTTTTGAAATTAAATTAACCATA ATATTGTTAAATTTCTTTATATCTAATAATTGTCAATGGAGTTTCAGTTTATTTCCCC TTTCATTAATTAATAAATTAATACATAAATTCAGTTTAAAGATAAATAAGAAAGTTC CTAAATATAAATTGGAAAATATGAATATTAACTCACCAAATATTCCATATACATATC TTTTTATATGTGATGGAAGTAACTATTTATGTATTAATGACAATTCATTAAATAACG AGGTATATGAAAACAAGATGAAATTGAACAATATCATTGGATATTACCATTATATTA ATTTGAATAGATTAACATATTATTTAGAAAAGGTAAATGCTAATTTTGTTTATAACC ATCATATATATGAATAA, Sequence Length: 6684 bp Clone #T108: MSP-4(PFB0310c) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone #T108, 238bp (Seuence 124-361 of gene PFB0310c 1-819) (SEQ ID NO: 13) AGAATTCTAGGGGAAGAAAAACCAAATGTGGACGGAGTAAGTACTAGTAATACTCC TGGAGGAAATGAATCTTCAAGTGCTTCCCCCAATTTATCTGACGCAGCAGAAAAAA AGGATGAAAAAGAAGCTTCTGAACAAGGAGAAGAAAGTCATAAAAAAGAAAATTC CCAAGAAAGCGCGAATGGTAAGGATGATGTTAAAGAAGAAAAAAAAACTAATGAA AAAAAAGATGATGGAA Sequence Length: 238 bp Amino acid sequence of Clone# T108 (SEQ ID NO: 14) RILGEEKPNVDGVSTSNTPGGNESSSASPNLSDAAEKKDEKEASEQGEESHKKENSQESA NGKDDVKEEKKTNEKKDDG Sequence Legth: 79 aa Amino acid sequence of PFB0310c (MSP-4) (SEQ ID NO: 15)

KVQEKVLEKSPKESQMVDDKKKTEAIPKKVVQPSSSNSGGHVGEEEDHNEGEGEHEEE EEHEEDDDDEDDDTYNKDDLEDEDLCKHNNGGCGDDKLCEYVGNRRVKCKCKEGYK LEGIECVELLSLASSSLNLIFNSFITIFVVILLIN, Sequence Length: 272 aa Coding Nucleotide Sequence of PFB0310c (MSP-4) (SEQ ID NO: 16) ATGTGGATAGTTAAATTTTTAATAGTAGTTCATTTTTTTATAATTTGTACCATAAACT TTGATAAATTGTATATCAGTTATTCTTATAATATAGTACCAGAAAATGGAAGAATGT

ATGGTTGATGATAAAAAAAAAACTGAAGCTATCCCTAAAAAGGTAGTTCAACCAAG TTCATCAAATTCAGGTGGCCATGTTGGAGAGGAGGAAGACCACAACGAAGGAGAA GGAGAACATGAAGAGGAGGAAGAACATGAAGAAGATGACGATGACGAAGATGATG ATACTTATAATAAGGACGATTTGGAAGATGAAGATTTATGTAAACATAATAATGGG GGTTGTGGAGATGATAAATTATGTGAATATGTTGGGAATAGAAGAGTAAAATGTAA ATGTAAAGAAGGATATAAATTAGAAGGTATTGAATGTGTTGAATTATTATCCTTAGC ATCTTCTTCTTTAAATTTAATTTTTAATTCATTTATAACAATATTTGTTGTTATATTGT TAATAAATTAA, Sequence Length: 819 bp Clond #T32: Pf-PGPS(MAL8P1.58) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone#T32, 300 bp (Sequence 1,023-1,3,22 of gene MAL8P1.58 (Pf- PGPS) 1-1986 (SEQ ID NO: 17) TTCTTTTATCCTTTATTTGAAAAAAATAAAAGCATTTTAGTACTTGAACTTTCCTTGC AGTGTGGATTTTCCATACCTCCAATATATGATGAAACAGATATGTTAGAAAACTTAT TAAAAAATATCGAAAAATATGATCAAAGCTTAGTTATTTCTTCGGGATATTTAAACT TCCCAATGAATTTTCTTAAATTAATTAGAAATATATATATCAACGTTATGCAAAAA AAAATGGTATTTTACAATTAATCACAGCGTCCCCATGCGCTAATATTTTTTATAAATC TAAAGGGATATCT Sequence Length: 300 bp Amino acid sequence of Clone#T32 (SEQ ID NO: 18) FFYPLFEKNKSILVLELSLQCGFSIPPIYDETDMLENLLKNIEKYDQSLVISSGYLNFPMNF LKLIRNIYINVMQKKNGILQLITASPCANSFYKSKGIS, Sequence Length: 100 Amino acid sequence of MAL8P1.58 (PfPGPS) (SEQ ID NO: 19) MALKFVIHEPKAKLLFTPKEFFNTLNDIFKNSQNRIVISCLYMGIGELEKELIDSIKKNVNI KDLKVDILLDRQRGTRLEGKFNESSVSILSELFKCSDNINISLFHNPLLGPILYNILPPRAN EAIGVMHMKIYIGDNILMLSGANLSDSYLRNRQDRYFVIENKFLADSIHNIINTIQGMSFT LNRDLTIKWENDLMNPLIDAYVFREQYYRRIRFMLQGIQKHISQYNKNYSYNNYYKNIK NDPINDKTYIYNNQNNNKYSYTSNEFRMLNSFSTDIFDKDTYNNKNQKNNHKKENMET

YKPSWTFHSKGIWIMDNMKSMKNVSNDNDNDNDNNNNDNNNNNINNNEFHSAKKY EQNVNNSPNVKNNLNKSEYFNNENFDKNIDEENDYYDNLPWCTVIGSSNYGYRAKYR DLEMSFIIKTNDYNLRCQLKKELNIIYESSHFVQVDELKLRYAFWLKFLVKYIFKWLL, Sequence Length: 661 Coding Nucleic acid sequence of gene MAL8P1.58 (PfPGPS) 1-1986 (SEQ ID NO: 20) ATGGCTCTGAAGTTTGTCATTCATGAACCTAAAGCAAAATTATTATTTACTCCTAAA GAATTTTTTAATACCTTAAATGACATTTTTAAGAACTCACAAAATCGTATTGTGATTA AAGAATGTGAATATAAAAGATTTAAAAGTTGATATATTATTAGATAGACAAAGAGG TACAAGACTAGAAGGGAAATTTAATGAAAGTTCAGTTAGTATTTTATCAGAACTTTT TAAATGTTCAGATAATATTAATATAAGCTTATTTCATAATCCTTTATTAGGTCCTATA CTTTATAATATCTTACCTCCTAGAGCAAATGAAGCTATAGGTGTAATGCATATGAAA ATTTATATTGGGGATAATATTCTAATGTTATCAGGAGCCAATTTAAGTGATAGCTAT TTACGAAATAGACAAGATAGATATTTTGTTATTGAAAATAAATTCTTAGCTGATTCT ATTCATAATATTATTAATACCATACAAGGTATGTCATTTACTCTAAATCGAGATTTA ACCATAAAGTGGGAAAATGATTTAATGAACCCACTTATAGATGCTTACGTATTTCGT GAACAATATTATAGAAGAATACGTTTTATGTTACAAGGAATTCAAAAACATATTTCA CAATATAATAAAAATTATTCATATAATAATTATTATAAAAATATAAAAAATGATCCA ATAAATGATAAGACATATATTTATAATAATCAAAATAACAATAAATATAGTTATACA TCAAACGAATTTCGCATGTTAAATTCTTTCAGTACAGATATATTCGATAAAGATACT TATAATAATAAAAACCAAAAAAATAATCATAAAAAAGAAAATATGGAAACACATA CTTTATTAGATACTAATCATGGAACATGTGATTCAACAATTAATCTTCTAAATAATA ATCAAAATGAAAACCATACAAATAATTTATTTACATATCTAAATGAAAAAGATGAA

TTCATATTCAGCTATGGCTAATGTGTGTATTGAATATATTACCAAAAATTTAACCAA TTTTCTAAAAAAGTAAATGGACAAAATGTTTCTGAACAAAATGATATTTCAAATCA AAAAATATATATTGAATATTACAAACCTTCATGGACATTTCATTCGAAAGGTATATG GATAATGGACAATATGAAAGTATGAAAAATGTGAGTAATGATAATGATAATGATA ATGATAATAATAATAATGATAATAATAATAATAATAATATTAATAATAATGAATTTC ATTCAGCTAAAAAATATGAACAAAATGTTAATAACTCACCAAATGTAAAAAATAAC CTGAACAAGTCAGAATATTTTAACAACGAAAATTTTGATAAGAATATTGATGAAGA GAATGATTATTATGATAATTTACCCTGGTGTACAGTGATTGGAAGTTCTAATTATGG GTATAGAGCAAAATATAGAGATTTGGAGATGAGTTTTATAATAAAAACAAATGATT ATAATTTGAGGTGTCAGTTAAAGAAAGAATTAAATATAATATATGAGTCATCTCATT TTGTACAAGTGGATGAATTGAAATTACGATATGCTTTTTGGTTAAAATTTTTAGTGA AATATATATTCAAATGGCTTTTATAA Sequence Length: 1986 bp Clone #T9: Mature parasite-infected erythrocyte surface antigen, erythrocyte membrane protein 2 (MESA) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone# T9, 459 bp (Sequence 2,080-2,538 of PFE0040c (MES) (SEQ ID NO: 21) GTAAAAGAAGGAATTAAAGAAAATGATACTGAAAATAAAGATAAAGTGATAGGAC AAGAAATAATAACTGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAGGAATTAAAGAAAATGATACTGAAAA TAAAGATAAAGTGATAGGACAAGAAATAATAACTGAAGAAGTAAAAAAGAAATT GAAAAACAAGAAGAAAAAGGAAATAAAGAAAATATTCTTGAAATTAAAGATATAG TAATTGGACAAGAAGTAATAATAGAAGAAGTAAAAAAAGTAATTAAAAAAAAAGT AGAAAAAGGAATTAAAGAAAATCATACTGAAAGTAAAGATAAAGTGATAGGACAA GAAATAATAGTTGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAGAAATTGAAAAACAAGTAGAAGAAGGAA TTAAAGAAAATGATACTGAAAGTAAAGATAAAGTGATAGGACAAGAAGTGATAAA AGGAGATGTTAATGAAGAA Sequence Length: 459 bp Amino acid sequence of Clone# T9 (SEQ IDNO: 22) VKEGIKENDTENKDKVIGQEIITEEVKEGIKENDTENKDKVIGQEIITEEVKKEIEKQEEK GNKENILEIKDIVIGQEVIIEEVKKVIKKKVEKGIKENHTESKDKVIGQEIIVEEVKEEIEEKQ VEEGIKENDTESKDKVIGQEVIKGDVNEE Sequence Length 153aa Amino acid sequence of PFE0040c (MES) (SEQ ID NO: 23) MEVICRNLCYDKKNNMMENEGNKVKKVYNNSSLKKYMKFCLCTIICVFLLDIYTNCES PTYSYSSIKNNNDRYVRILSETEPPMSLEEIMRTFDEDHLYSIRNYIECLRNAPYIDDPLW GSVVTDKRNNCLQHIKLLEMQESERRKQQEEENAKDIEEIRKKEKEYLMKELEEMDESD VEKAFRELQFIKLRDRTRPRKHVNVMGESKETDESKETDESKETGESKETGESKETGES KETGESKETGESKETGESKETGESKETGESKETGESKETGESKETGESKETGESKETGES KETGESKETRIYEETKYNKITSEFRETENVKITEESKDREGNKVSGPYENSENSNVTSESE ETKKLAEKEENEGEKLGENVNDGASENSEDPKKLTEQEENGTKESSEETKDDKPEENEK KADNKKKSKKKKKSFFQMLGCNFLCNKNIETDDEEETLVVKDDAKKKHKFLREANTE KNDNEKKDKLLGEGDKEDVKEKNDEQKDKVLGEGDKEDVKEKNDEQKDKVLGEGDK EDVKEKNDGKKDKVIGSEKTQKEIKEKVEKRVKKKCKKKVKKGIKENDTEGNDKVKG PEIIIEEVKEEIKKQVEDGIKENDTEGNDKVKGPEIITEEVKEEIKKQVEEGIKENDTEGND

MKEDVNEKDTANKDKEIEQEKEKEEVKEKEEVKEKEEVKEKEEVKEKEEVFKEEVKE KEEVKEKEEVKEKDTESKDKEIEQEKEKEEVKEVKEKDTENKDKVIGQEIIIEEIKKEVK KRVKKRNNKNENKDNVIVQEIMNEDVNEKDTANKDKVIEQEKEKEEVKEKEEVKEKE EVKEKEEVKEKEEVKEKEEVKEKDTESKDNVIVQEIMNEDVNEKDTESKDKMIGKEVII EEVKEEVKKRVNKEVNKRVNRRNRKNERKDVIEQEIVSEEVNEKDTKNNDKKIGKRVK KPIDDCKKEREVQEESEEESEEESEEESEEESEEESEEESEEESEEESEEESEEESEEESEEE SEEESEEESEEESEEESEEESDEEKNTSGLVHRRNCKKEKKYNNGELEEYYKEKQNEEYF DEEYIIQSKEHNTLNTFPNMALNEDFRREFHNILSIHEDTDLMELKRILYNLFLFYNPHM NNKQKAELDKKFSEMNVVHQILNYEERIRMYEENAARGRLNTVILDPIITFNVIFGDDT MFKFIDE Sequence Length: 1434 aa Coding Nucleotide sequence of PFE0040c (MESA) (SEQ ID NO: 24) TGGAGGTAATTTGTAGAAATTTATGCTACGATAAGAAAAATAATATGATGGAAAAT GAAGGGAACAAAGTGAAAAAGTGTATAATAATTCTTCTTTAAAGAAATATATGA GTTTTGTTTATGCACTATAATATGTGTTTTTTATTAGATATCTATACGAATTGTGAA TCACCCACCTATTCATACAGTTCAATAAAGAATAATAATGACAGATATGTAAGAATT TTAAGTGAAACTGAACCACCGATGAGTTTAGAGGAAATAATGAGAACATTTGATGA AGATCATCTATATTCTATAAGAAACTATATTGAATGTTTAAGAAACGCTCCATATAT CGATGATCCTTTGTGGGGTTCGGTTGTTACAGATAAACGTAATAATTGTCTTCAGCA TATTAAATTATTGGAAATGCAAGAATCCGAAAGAAGAAAACAACAAGAAGAGGAG AATGCTAAGGATATTGAAGAAATAAGAAAGAAAGAAAAGAATACCTTATGAAAG AATTAGAAGAAATGGATGAATCCGATGTAGAAAAGGCATTTAGAGAATTACAATTT ATTAAGTTAAGAGATAGAACTAGACCTAGAAAACATGTGAATGTAATGGGAGAATC TAAGGAAACAGATGAATCTAAGGAAACAGATGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTA AGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAG GAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGA AACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAA CTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAAACTGGTGAATCTAAGGAACT GGTGAATCTAAGGAAACAAGAATATATGAGGAAACAAAATATAACAAAATAACGA GTGAATTTAGAGAAACAGAAAACGTGAAGATAACAGAGGAATCTAAGGATAGAGA AGGTAACAAAGTATCAGGTCCATATGAAAACTCAGAAAATTCCAATGTAACAAGTG AATCTGAAGAGACCAAAAAATTAGCCGAAAAAGAGGAGAATGAGGGAGAAAAATT AGGAGAAAATGTTAATGATGGGGCATCAGAAAATTCAGAAGATCCCAAAAAATTAA CAGAACAAGAAGAAATGGTACAAAGGAAAGTTCTGAAGAAACAAAAGATGATAA ACCGGAAGAAAATGAGAAAAAGGCAGATAATAAAAAAAAAAGTAAAAAAAAGAA AAAATCATTTTTTCAAATGTTAGGATGTAATTTCCTATGTAATAAAAATATTGAAAC TGATGATGAAGAAGAAACGTTGGTAGTAAAAGATGATGCTAAAAAGAAACATAAAT TTTTAAGAGAAGCTAATACTGAAAAAAATGATAATGAAAAGAAAGATAAATTATTA GGAGAAGGAGATAAAGAAGATGTTAAAGAAAAGAATGATGAACAGAAAGATAAAG TATTAGGAGAAGGAGATAAAGAAGATGTTAAAGAAAAGAATGATGAACAGAAGA TAAAGTATTAGGAGAAGGAGATAAAGAAGATGTTAAAGAAAAGAATGATGGAAAG AAAGATAAAGTGATAGGATCAGAAAAAACACAAAAGGAAATTAAAGAAAAAGTAG AAAAAAGAGTTAAAAAAAAGTGTAAAAAAAAAGTAAAAAAAGGAATTAAAGAAAA TGATACTGAAGGTAACGATAAAGTGAAAGGACCAGAAATAATAATTGAAGAAGTA AAAGAAGAAATTAAAAAACAAGTAGAAGATGGAATTAAAGAAAATGATACTGAAG AAAAAAGAGTTAAAAAAAAGTGTAAAAAAAAAGTAAAAAAAGGAATTAAAGAAAA TGATACTGAAGGTAACGATAAAGTGAAAGGACCAGAAATAATAATTGAAGAAGTA AAAGAAGAAATTAAAAAACAAGTAGAAGATGGAATTAAAGAAAATGATACTGAAG GTAACGATAAAGTGAAAGGGCCAGAAATAATAACTGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAGAAAT TAAAAAACAAGTAGAAGAAGGAATTAAAGAAAATGATACTGAAGGTAACGATAAA GTGAAAGGGCCAGAAATAATAACTGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAGAAATTAAAAAACAAG TAGAAGAAGGAATTAAAGAAAATGATACTGAAAGTAAGGATAAATTGATAGGACA

AGATAAAGTGACAAAACAGGAAAAAGTAAAAGAAGTTAAAAAAGAAGTAAAAAAA AAAGTTAAAAAAAGAGTAAAAAAAAGAAATAATAAGAATGAAAGAAAAGATAATG TGATAGGAAAAGAAATAATGAAAGAAGATGTTAATGAAAAAGATACCGCAAACAA AGATAAAGAGATAGAACAAGAAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTTAAAGAAAAAGAAGA AGTTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGA AGTTAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTTAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAAAGAAGA AGTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGA AAAAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAGTTAAAGAAAAAGATACCGAAAACAAAGATAAAGTG ATAGGACAAGAAATAATAATAGAAGAAATAAAAAAAGAAGTTAAAAAAAGAGTAA AAAAAAGAAATAATAAAAATGAAAACAAAGATAATGTGATAGTACAAGAAATAAT GAACGAAGATGTTAACGAAAAAGATACCGCAAACAAAGATAAGGTGATAGAACAA GAAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTTAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTTAAAGAAAAAGAAGAA GTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAAAAGAAGAA GTAAAAGAAAAAGATACCGAAAGCAAAGATAATGTGATAGTACAAGAAATAATGA ACGAAGATGTTAACGAAAAAGATACCGAAAGCAAAGATAAAATGATAGGAAAAGA AGTAATAATAGAAGAAGTAAAAGAAGAAGTTAAAAAAAGAGTAAACAAAGAAGTT AACAAAAGAGTAAACAGAAGAAATAGAAAAAATGAAAGAAAAGATGTGATAGAAC AAGAAATAGTAAGCGAAGAAGTTAACGAAAAAGATACCAAAAACAACGATAAAAA GATAGGAAAAAGAGTCAAAAAACCAATAGATGATTGTAAAAAAGAAAGAGAAGTA CAAGAAGAATCTGAAGAAGAGTCTGAAGAAGAGTCTGAAGAAGAATCTGAAGAAG AGTCTGAAGAAGAATCTGAAGAAGAGTCTGAAGAAGAATCTGAAGAAGAGTCTGA AGAAGAATCTGAAGAAGAATCTGAAGAAGAGTCTGAAGAAGAATCTGAAGAAGAG TCTGAAGAAGAGTCTGAAGAAGAGTCTGAAGAAGAATCTGAAGAAGAATCTGATGA AGAAAAAAATACATCAGGTTTGGTACATAGAAGAAATTGTAAAAAAGAAAAGAAA TATAATAATGGAGAATTAGAAGAATATTATAAAGAGAAACAGAATGAAGAATATTT TGATGAAGAATATATTATTCAATCAAAAGAACATAATACTTTGAATACATTCCCAAA TATGGCATTAAATGAAGATTTCAGAAGAGAATTTCACAATATATTAAGTATTCATGA AGATACAGATTTGATGGAACTAAAAAGAATCTTATATAATTTATTTTTAGAATATAA TCCACATATGAATAATAAACAGAAAGCAGAATTGGATAAGAAATTTAGTGAAATGA ATGTGGTACATCAAATATTAAATTATGAAGAGAGAATACGCATGTATGAAGAAAAT GCAGCACGAGGAAGACTAAATACAGTTATTCTGGATCCAATTATTACATTTAATGTA ATATCGAGATGATACAATGTTTAAGTTTATTGATGAATAA Sequence Length: 4305 bp Clone#TL22: Plasmodium falciparum glutamic acid-rich protein (Pf-GARP) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone#TL22, 792 bp (Sequence 1,231-2.022 of gene PJA_0520c) (SEQ ID NO: 25) TCAAAAGAACACAAATCAAAAGGAAAGAAAGATAAAGGAAAGAAAGATAAAGGA AAACATAAAAAAGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGTAAAAAAACACGTAGTTAAAAATGTTA TAGAAGATGAAGACAAAGATGGTGTAGAAATAATAAACTTAGAAGATAAAGAGGC ATGTGAAGAACAACACATAACAGTAGAAAGTAGACCACTAAGCCAACCACAATGTA AACTAATAGATGAACCAGAACAATTAACATTAATGGATAAATCAAAAGTTGAAGAA AAAAACTTATCCATACAAGAGCAATTAATAGGTACCATAGGACGTGTTAATGTAGT ACCCAGAAGAGATAATCATAAGAAAAAAATGGCGAAGATAGAGGAAGCTGAACTT CAAAAACAGAAACATGTTGATAAGGAAGAAGACAAAAAAGAAGAATCCAAAGAAG TAGAAGAAGAATCTAAAGAGGTACAAGAAGATGAAGAAGAAGTAGAAGAAGATGA AGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAGGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAGG AAGAAGAAGAAGATGAAGTAGAAGAAGATGAAGATGATGCTGAAGAAGATGAAGA TGATGCTGAAGAAGATGAAGATGATGCTGAAGAAGATGATGATGATGCTGAAGAAG ATGATGATGATGCTGAAGAAGATGATGATGAAGATGAAGATGAAGATGAAGAAGA AGAAGAAGATGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAATCAGAAAAAAAAATAAAAAGAAATTT GAGAAAAAATGCCAAAATTTAA Sequence Length: 792 Amino acid sequence of Clone#TL22 (SEQ ID NO: 26) SKEHKSKGKKDKGKKDKGKHKKAKKEKVKKHVVKNVIEDEDKDGVEIINLEDKEACE EQHITVESRPLSQPQCKLIDEPEQLTLMDKSKVEEKNLSIQEQLIGTIGRVNVVPRRDNHK KKMAKIEEAELQKQKHVDKEEDKKEESKEVEEESKEVQEDEEEVEEDEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEDEVEEDEDDAEEDEDDAEEDEDDAEEDDDDAEEDDDDAEEDDDEDEDE DEEEEEDEEEEESEKKIKRNLRKNAKI Sequence Length: 263 Amino acid sequence of Pf-GARP (PFA_0620c) (SEQ ID NO: 27) MNVLFLSYNICILFFVVCTLNFSTKCFSNGLLKNQNILNKSFDSITGRLLNETELEKNKDD NSKSETLLKEEKDEKDDVPTTSNDNLKNAHNNNEISSSTDPTNIIINVNDKDNENSVDKK KDKKEKKHKKDKKEKKEKKDKKEKKDKKEKKHKKEKKHKKDKKKEENSEVMSLYK TGQHKPKNATEHGEENLYEEMVSEINNAQGGLLLSSPYQYREQGGCGIISSVHETSND TKDNDKENISEDKKEDHQQEEMLKTLDKKERKQKEKEMKEQEKIEKKKKKQEEKEKK KQEKERKKQEKKERKQKEKEMKKQKKIEKERKKKEEKEKKKKKHDKENEETMQQPD QTSEETNNEIMVPLPSPLTDVTTPEEHKEGEHKEEEHKEGEHKEGEHKEEEHKEEEHKK

Coding Nucleic acid sequence gene Pf-GARP (PFA_0620c) (SEQ ID NO: 28) ATGAATGTGCTATTTCTTTCGTATAATATTTGTATTCTTTTTTTTGTTGTATGCACATT AAATTTTCTACTAAGTGCTTTTCCAATGGTTTATTGAAGAATCAAAATATCCTAAAC AAAAGTTTTGATTCCATAACGGGAAGATTATTAAACGAAACCGAATTAGAAAAAAA TAAAGATGATAATTCAAAATCTGAAACGTTGTTAAAAGAGGAAAAAGATGAAAAGG ATGATGTACCTACAACGAGTAATGACAACCTTAAGAATGCTCATAATAATAATGAA ATTTCAAGTTCAACTGATCCAACGAATATTATTAATGTTAATGATAAAGATAATGAA AACTCTGTAGATAAAAAAAAAGATAAAAAAGAAAAAAAGCATAAAAAAGATAAAA AAGAAAAAAAAGAAAAAAAAGATAAAAAAGAAAAAAAAGATAAAAAAGAAAAAA AACATAAAAAAGAAAAAAAACATAAAAAAGATAAAAAAAAAGAAGAAAACAGTG AAGTGATGTCTTTATATAAAACGGGTCAACATAAACCAAAAAACGCAACAGAACAT GGTGAAGAAAATTTATATGAAGAAATGGTAAGTGAAATAAATAATAATGCACAAGG TGGACTCCTTTTATCAAGCCCATATCAATATAGAGAACAAGGAGGATGTGGAATCA TATCTAGTGTTCATGAGACGTCTAATGATACAAAAGATAATGATAAAGAAAATATA TCCGAAGACAAAAAGGAGGACCATCAACAAGAAGAAATGTTGAAAACACTTGATA AAAAAGAACGTAAACAAAAAGAAAAAGAAATGAAAGAACAAGAAAAAATCGAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAGCAAGAAGAAAAGGAAAAGAAAAAACAAGAAAAAGAAAGAA AAAAACAAGAAAAGAAAGAACGTAAACAAAAAGAAAAAGAAATGAAAAACAAA AAAAATAGAAAAAGAAAGAAAAAAGAAAGAAGAAAAGGAAAAGAAAAAGAAAA AACATGATAAGGAAAATGAAGAAACAATGCAACAACCAGATCAAACAAGTGAAGA CAGAAGAACACAAAGAAGGAGAACACAAAGAAGAAGAACACAAAGAAGGAGAAC ACAAAGAAGGAGAACACAAAGAAGAAGAACACAAAGAAGAAGAACACAAAAAAG

Clone#TL27: Plasmodium falciparm 3D7 Plasmodium exported protein (PHISTc), unknown function (PFI1780w) mRNS, complete cds Nucleic acid Sequence of Clone#TL27, 303 bp (Sequence 691-998 of gene (PFI1780w) (SEQ ID NO: 29) GAACATGGTGAAATGCTAAATCAAAAAAGAAAACTTAAACAACATGAACTTGATAG AAGAGCACAAAGGGAAAAAATGTTAGAAGAACATAGTAGAGGAATATTTGCTAAA GGATATTTGGGAGAAGTAGAATCAGAAACTATAAAAAAGAAAACGGAACACCATG AAAATGTAAATGAAGATAATGTAGAAAAACCAAAATTGCAACAACATAAAGTTCAA CCACCAAAAGTCCAACAACAAAAAGTTCAACCACCAAAATCACAACAACAAAAAG TTCAACCACCAAAATCACAACAACAA Sequence Length: 303 Amino acid sequence of Clone#TL27 EHGEMLNQKRKLKQHELDRRAQREKMLEEHSRGIFAKGYLGEVESETIKKKTEHHENV NEDNVEKPKLQQHKVQPPKVQQQKVQPPKSQQQKVQPPKSQQQ Sequence Length: 101 Amino acid sequence of PFI1780w (SEQ ID NO: 31) MAVSTYNNTRRNGLRYVLKRRTILSVFAVICMLSLNLSIFENNNNNYGFHCNKRHFKSL AEASPEEHNNLRSHSTSDPKKNEEKSLSDEINKCDMKKYTAEEINEMINSSNEFINRNDM NIIFSYVHESEREKFKKVEENIFKFIQSIVETYKIPDEYKMRKFKFAHFEMQGYALKQEKF

QNQKGQKQVSPKAKGNNQAKPTKGNKLKKN Sequence Length: 383 aa Coding Nucleic acid sequence gene PFI1780w (SEQ ID NO: 32) ATGGCTGTTAGTACATATAATAATACTCGAAGGAATGGTCTAAGATATGTCCTTAAA AGACGTACCATTCTATCTGTTTTTGCTGTCATTTGTATGTTATCATTGAATTTATCAA TATTTGAAAATAATAATAATAATTATGGATTCCATTGCAATAAAAGACATTTTAAAA GTTTAGCTGAAGCAAGTCCAGAAGAACATAACAATTTAAGAAGTCATTCAACAAGT GATCCAAAGAAGAATGAAGAGAAATCATTAAGTGACGAAATAAATAAATGTGATAT GAAAAAATACACTGCTGAAGAAATAAATGAAATGATTAACAGTTCTAATGAATTTA TAAATAGAAATGATATGAATATAATATTTAGTTATGTACATGAATCTGAGAGAGAA AAATTTAAAAAGGTAGAAGAAAATATATTTAAATTTATTCAAAGTATAGTAGAAAC ATATAAAATACCAGATGAATATAAAATGAGAAAATTCAATTTGCACACTTTGAAA TGCAAGGATATGCATTAAAACAAGAAAAGTTCCTTTTAGAATATGCTTTTCTTTCCTT AAATGGTAAATTATGTGAACGTAAAAAATTTAAAGAAGTTTTAGAATATGTAAAAA GGGAATGGATTGAGTTTAGAAAATCAATGTTTGACGTATGGAAGGAAAAATTAGCT

GTACAACAACAAAAAGTTCAACCACCAAAAGTGCAAAAACCAAAACTTCAAAATCA AAAAGGACAAAAGCAAGTATCTCCCAAAGCAAAGGGTAATAATCAAGCGAAACCA ACCAAAGGAAACAAGTTAAAGAAAAATTAA Sequence Length: 152 bp Clone#TL5: Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 knob-associated histidine-rich protein (PFB0100c) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone#TL5, 242 bp (Sequence 1309-1550 of gene (PFB0100c) (SEQ ID NO: 33) GTTAAAGAAAAGGGAGAAAAGCATAATGGAAAAAAACCATGCAGCAAAAAAACTA ACGAAGAAAATAAAAATAAAGAAAAAACCAATAATTCAAAATCAGATGGATCAAA AGCTCATGAAAAAAAAGAAAATGAAACAAAAAACACCGCTGGAGAAAATAAAAAA GTAGATTCTACTTCAGCTGATAATAAATCAACAAATGCTGCTACACCAGGCGCAAA AGATAAAACTCAAGGAGGAAA Sequence Length: 242 bp Amino acid sequence of Clone#TL5 (SEQ ID NO: 34) VKEKGEKNGKKPCSKKTNEENKNKEKTNNSKSDGSKAHEKKENETKNTAGENKKVD STSADNKSTNAATPGAKDKTQGG Sequence Length: 80aa Amino acid sequence of PFB0100c (SEQ ID NO: 35) MKSFKNKNTLRRKKAFPVFTKILLVSFLVWVLKCSNNCNNGNGSGDSFDFRNKRTLAQ KQHEHHHHHHHQHQHQHQAPHQAHHHHHHGEVNHQAPQVHQQVHGQDQAHHHHH HHHHQLQPQQPQGTVANPPSNEPVVKTQVFREARPGGGFKAYEEKYESKHYKLKENV VDGKKDCDEKYEAANYAFSEECPYTVNDYSQENGPNIFALRKRFPLGMNDEDEEGKEA LAIKDKLPGGLDEYQNQLYGICNETCTTCGPAAIDYVPADAPNGYAYGGSAHDGSHGN LRGHDNKGSEGYGYEAPYNPGFNGAPGSNGMQNYVPPHGAGYSAPYGVPHGAAHGSR YSSFSSVNKYGKHGDEKHHSSKKHEGNDGEGEKKKKSKKHKDHDGEKKKSKKHKDN

TDKTGASTNAATNKGQCAAEGATKGATKEASTSKEATKEASTSKEATKEASTSKEATK EASTSKGATKEASTTEGATKGASTTAGSTTGATTGANAVQSKDETADKNAANNGEQV MSRGQAQLQEAGKKKKKRGCCG Sequence Length: 654 aa Coding Nucleic acid sequence gene PFB0100c (SEQ ID NO: 36) ATGAAAAGTTTTAAGAACAAAAATACTTTGAGGAGAAAGAAGGCTTTCCCTGTTTTT ACTAAAATTCTTTTAGTCTCTTTTTTAGTATGGGTTTTGAAGTGCTCTAATAACTGCA ATAATGGAAACGGATCCGGTGACTCCTTCGATTTCAGAAATAAGAGAACTTTAGCA CAAAAGCAACATGAACACCATCACCACCATCACCATCAACATCAACACCAACACCA AGCTCCACACCAAGCACACCACCATCATCATCATGGAGAAGTAAATCACCAAGCAC CACAGGTTCACCAACAAGTACATGGTCAAGACCAAGCACACCATCACCATCATCAC CACCATCATCAATTACAACCTCAACAACCCCAGGGAACAGTTGCTAATCCTCCTAGT AATGAACCAGTTGTAAAAACCCAAGTATTCAGGGAAGCAAGACCAGGTGGAGGTTT CAAAGCATATGAAGAAAAATACGAATCAAAACACTATAAATTAAAGGAAAATGTTG TCGATGGTAAAAAAGATTGTGATGAAAAATACGTAAGCTGCCAATTATGCTTTCTCCG AAGAGTGCCCATACACCGTAAACGATTATAGCCAAGAAAATGGTCCAAATATATTT GCCTTAAGAAAAAGATTCCCTCTTGGAATGAATGATGAAGATGAAGAAGGTAAAGA AGCATTAGCAATAAAAGATAAATTACCAGGTGGTTTAGATGAATACCAAAACCAAT TATATGGAATATGTAATGAGACATGTACCACATGTGGACCTGCCGCTATAGATTATG TTCCAGCAGATGCACCAAATGGCTATGCTTATGGAGGAAGTGCACACGATGGTTCTC ACGGTAATTTAAGAGGACACGATAATAAAGGTTCAGAAGGTTATGGATATGAAGCT CCATATAACCCAGGATTTAATGGTGCTCCTGGAAGTAATGGTATGCAAAATTATGTC CCACCCCATGGTGCAGGCTATTCAGCTCCATACGGAGTTCCACATGGTGCAGCCCAT GGTTCAAGATATAGTTCATTCAGTTCCGTAAATAAATATGGAAAACACGGTGATGA AAAACACCATTCCTCTAAAAAGCATGAAGGAAATGACGGTGAAGGAGAAAAAAAG AAAAAATCAAAAAAACACAAAGACCACGATGGAGAAAAGAAAAATCAAAAAAA CACAAAGACAATGAAGATGCAGAAAGCGTAAAATCAAAAAAACACAAAGCCACG ATTGTGAAAAGAAAAATCAAAAAACACAAAGACAATGAAGATGCAGAAAGCGT

GGACAATGTGCTGCTGAAGGAGCAACTAAGGGAGCAACTAAAGAAGCAAGTACTTC TAAAGAAGCAACAAAAGAAGCAAGTACTTCTAAAGAAGCAACAAAAGAAGCAAGT ACTTCTAAAGAAGCAACAAAAGAAGCAAGTACTTCTAAAGGAGCAACTAAAGAAG CAAGTACTACTGAAGGAGCAACTAAAGGAGCAAGTACTACTGCAGGTTCAACTACA GGAGCAACTACAGGAGCTAATGCAGTACAATCTAAAGATGAAACTGCCGATAAAAA TGCTGCAAATAATGGTGAACAAGTAATGTCAAGAGGACAAGCACAATTACAAGAAG CAGGAAAGAAAAAGAAGAAAAGAGGATGCTGTGGTTAA Sequence Length: 1965 bp  Clone #TL16: Plasmodium falciparum isolate 822 rhoptry associated membrane antigen gene (MAL7P1.208) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone#TL16, 432 bp (Sequence 953-, 1384 of gene MAL7P1.208) (SEQ ID NO: 37) GAAGAATCCAAAAATGAAGAATTTAAAAATGAAGAATTCAAAAATGTAGATAAAG AAAATTATGATGATAAAAATATTTTCTATGGTTATAGTGATAATGATGATGAAAGCT TTTTAGAAACTGATTCTTATGAAGAATATGAAGACGAAGATAAAGATGTTGAAGAT GAGTATGAAGAAAGTTTCTTACAAAATGATGAGAAAAAAATGGTCTTTTATGATTTA TACAAGCCAGAAGAAAATGAATCTTATTATGAAAAGAAACAAAAGAAAGAAGAAA AAGAAGAGAAAGAAGAGAAAGAACAAAGTTTGAACAAACAAAACGATATGGAAG ACCAAGAAGATAATGAAGAATATAAATTTGAAGAAGAAAATAAAGAAGACCTTCTA GATGTCCAACAAGATGAAGAATTACCAAGTGAAGGAAAACAA Sequence Length: 432 Amino acid sequence of Clone#TL16 (SEQ ID NO: 38) EESKNEEFKNEEFKNVDKENYDDKNIFYGYSDNDDESFLETDSYEEYEDEDKDVEDEYE ESFLQNDEKKMVFYDLYKPEENESYYEKKQKKEEKEEKEEKEQSLNKQNDMEDQEDN EEYKFEEENKEDLLDVQQDEELPSEGKQ Sequence Length:  144 Amino acid sequence of MAL7P1.208 (SEQ ID NO: 39) IFSDYERSIKNFSISSHAENNYDNIINEYKKIKDINNNINILSSVRKGRILYDSFLEINKLE NDKKEKHEHEDEYEDNDESFLETEEYEDNEDEKYNKDEDDYAESFIETDEYEDNEDDK YNKDEDDYSESFIETDEYDDNEEEQYNKDEDDYADSFIETDHYENNDDKNEEEEEYND QDNDYGYNFLETDEYDDSEEYDYDDKEYGESFLEKEEGEEMKDEEMKDEEMKDVEM KDEEMKDEEIKYDEMKNEEMKYDEMKDEVMKDEEMKDEVMKDEEMKDEQMKYEEF

LNEIQNVSDVHAFIQKSMKYLDDLIDEEQTIKDAVKKSAYKGNKKLGNNKKSQMILEE EPEENFEEDADEELNKLMEQEKNIVDKEIKNSKANKSNKKLQFNNTNKQNKMYMKNE YNNKTKNNKNNKFEQQNYDESYMDDDYEQNEEFNDNNQSEDMKETNELDKINDELLT DQGPNEDTLLENNNKIFDNKFVAHKKREKSISPHSYQKVSTKVQNKEDMENKEEKQLIS Sequence Length: 704 Coding Nucleic acid sequence gene MAL7P1.208 (SEQ ID NO: 40) ATTAGCTTTTCTGATTATGAGAGATCAATAAAAAACTTTTCTATTTCTTCTCATGCAG AAAATAATTATGATAATATAATAAATGAATATAAAAAAATAAAAGATATTAACAAC AATATAAACATATTATCATCAGTACATAGAAAAGGAAGAATATTGTACGACAGCTT TTTAGAAATAAATAAGTTGGAAAATGACAAAAAAGAGAAACATGAAAAAGAAGAT GAATATGAAGATAATGATGAAAGCTTTTTAGAAACTGAAGAATATGAAGATAATGA AGATGAAAAATATAACAAAGATGAAGATGATTATGCAGAAAGTTTTATTGAGACTG ATGAATATGAAGATAATGAAGATGATAAATATAATAAAGATGAAGATGATTATTCA GAAAGCTTTATTGAGACTGATGAATATGATGATAATGAAGAAGAACAATATAATAA AGATGAAGATGATTATGCAGATAGTTTTATTGAGACAGACCATTATGAAAATAACG ATGATAAAAATGAAGAAGAAGAAGAATATAATGATCAAGATAATGATTATGGATAT AACTTTTTAGAAACTGACGAATACGATGATAGCGAAGAATATGATTACGACGATAA GGAATACGGAGAGAGTTTCCTCGAAAAAGAAGAAGGTGAAGAAATGAAAGATGAA GAGATGAAAGATGAAGAAATGAAAGATGTAGAAATGAAAGATGAAGAGATGAAAG ATGAAGAGATAAAATATGACGAGATGAAAAATGAAGAGATGAAATATGACGAGAT GAAAGATGAAGTGATGAAAGATGAAGAGATGAAAGATGAAGTGATGAAAGATGAA

TCATATATGGATGATGATTATGAACAAAATGAAGAATTTAATGATAATAATCAAAG CGAAGATATGAAAGAAACAAATGAACTCGATAAAATTAATGATGAACTATTAACTG ATCAAGGACCAAACGAAGATACATTATTAGAAAATAATAATAAAATTTTCGATAAT AAATTTGTAGCACATAAAAAAAGAGAAAAAAGTATATCCCCACACAGTTACCAAAA GGTATCTACCAAAGTACAAAATAAGGAAGACATGGAAAATAAGGAAGAGAAACAA TTGATAAGTAA Sequence Length: 2114 Clone #TL45: Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 Cg4 protein (PF07_0033) Nucleic acid sequence of Clone#TL45, 650 bp (Sequence 1,764-2413 of gene PF07_0033) (SEQ ID NO: 41) TCACCAAATAAAACAGAATTAAAAAAAGGAGAAGAAGGAAAAGTACAAACATGTT ATACAACAATACCTATTGAAACATTATTAGCTCAAGGATCTTATAGTTCTAAAGATA TATTCAATTTTAGTGAACAGGAAATTAATATGCAACATAGTGATATATTAGAAGGAG AACGATTAAAACATCTTAATGAACTAGAAACTATTATATATGAAAGTAGAAGTAGA CTTAATGGTATATATAAAAATTTTGTTATGGATGATGAAAGAGATCGTATTTTACTTT CCTTAGATGATTATGAAAATTGGTTATATGATAATATAGAAGAAAATAAAAATATGT TTATTAAAAAAAAAGAAGAATTAGAGATCTTATAAAAAATATTGTACAAAAATTT GATGTATATAATTCAAAACAACAAAATCTAGGAAATATAATTAATCATCTTAATAAT ATCATAACACAATGTTCAAATAAACCATCGGATGAAAGTCAAAATATAATTAATAG AACAACGAAATTCTTAAATAATATTAATTCTTTACAAGAACAAGAAAAAAATAAAC CACTATACGAACCACCTGTATATACACTTAACGATATTGAAGCAGAATTTAATGAAG TCACACAACTCGCTCAAAAATTCTTTTC Sequence Length: 650 bp Amino acid sequence of Clone#TL45 (SEQ ID NO: 42) SPNKTELKKGEEGKVQTCYTTIPIETLLAQGSYSSKDIFNFSEQEINMQHSDILEGERLKH LNELETIIYESRSRLNGIYKNFVMDDERDRILLSLDDYENWLYDNIEENKNMFIKKKEEIR DLIKNIVQKFDVYNSKQQNLGNIINHLNNIITQCSNKPSDESQNIINRTTKFLNNINSLQEQ EKNKPLYEPPVYTLNDIEAEFNEVTQLAQKFF Sequence Length: 216 aa Amino acid sequence of gene PF07_0033 (SEQ ID NO: 43) MSVLGIDIGNDNSVVATINKGAINVVRNDISERLTPTLVGFTEKERLIGDSALSKLKSNYK NTCRNIKNLIGKIGTDVKDDIEIHEAYGDLIPCEYNYLGYEVEYKNEKVVFSAVRVLSALL SHLIKMAEKYIGKECKEIVLSYPPTFTNCQKECLLAATKIINANVLRIISDNTAVALDYGM YRMKEFKEDNGSLLVFVNIGYANTCVCVARFFSNKCILCDIADSNLGGRNLDNELIKYI TNIFVNNYKMNPLYKNNTPELCPMGTGRLNKFLVTSTASDQQNGINNKVRIKLQEVAIK TKKVLSANNEASIHVECLYEDLDCQGSINRETFEELCSNFFLTKLKHLLDTALCISKVNIQ DIHSIEVLGGSTRVPFIQNFLQQYFQKPLSKTLIADESIARGCVLSAAMVSKHYKVKEYEC VEKVTHPINVEWHNINDASKSNVEKLYTRDSLKKKVKKIVIPEKGHIKLTAYYENTPDLP SNCIKELGSCIVKINEKNDKIVESHVMTTFSNYDTFTFLGAQTVTKSVIKSKDEKKKADD

ANEEQNNEAKNNEEKENSTKNENSANPEE Sequence Length: 873 aa Coding Nucleic acid sequence gene PF07_0033 (SEQ ID NO: 44) ATGTCGGTTTTAGGTATAGATATAGGAAATGACAATTCTGTTGTAGCTACTATTAAT AAAGGTGCTATAAATGTTGTGAGGAATGACATATCCGAAAGGTTAACCCCGACATT AGTTGGTTTCACCGAAAAAGAAAGATTAATAGGTGATAGTGCTTTATCTAAATTGAA ATCTAATTATAAGAATACATGTAGGAATATAAAGAATTTGATAGGTAAAATAGGTA CCGATGTAAAAGATGATATAGAAATACATGAAGCATATGGGGATTTAATACCATGT GAATATAATTATTTAGGTTATGAAGTTGAATATAAAAATGAAAAAGTTGTATTTAGT GCTGTTCGTGTTTTATCAGCCTTATTATCACATTTGATTAAAATGGCTGAAAAATATA TTGGAAAGGAATGTAAAGAAATTGTCTTATCATATCCTCCAACATTACAAATTGTC AAAAAGAATGTTTATTAGCTGCAACTAAAATTATTAATGCTAATGTTTTGAGAATTA TTAGTGATAATACAGCTGTTGCTCTAGATTATGGAATGTACAGAATGAAAGAATTCA AAGAAGATAATGGATCCTTACTAGTTTTTGTTAACATTGGTTATGCAAATACTTGTG TATGTGTTGCGCGTTTTTTTTCTAATAAATGTGAAATCTTATGTGATATTGCTGATTC AAATTTAGGTGGTAGAAATTTAGATAATGAACTTATTAAATATATTACAAATATATT TGTTAATAATTATAAAATGAATCCATTATATAAAAACAATACTCCGGAATTATGCCC CATGGGTACTGGTAGATTAAATAAGTTTTTAGTAACATCTACAGCATCTGATCAACA AAATGGTATTAATAATAAAGTACGTATTAAATTACAAGAAGTTGCTATAAAAACAA AGAAAGTACTTTCAGCAAATAATGAAGCGTCCATACATGTTGAATGTTTATATGAAG ATTTAGATTGTCAAGGTTCCATTAATAGAGAAACCTTTGAAGAATTGTGTTCAAACT TCTTCTTAACAAAATTAAAACATCTTCTAGATACTGCTCTATGTATTAGTAAAGTAA ACATACAAGATATACATTCTATTGAAGTTTTGGGTGGATCCACAAGAGTTCCATTTA TTCAAAATTTTTACAACAATATTTCAGAAACCATTATCTAAGACCCTTATAGCAG ATGAATCTATAGCAAGAGGTTGTGTACTATCAGCTGCTATGGTTAGTAAACATTATA AAGTAAAAGAATATGAATGTGTAGAAAAAGTTACACATCCAATTAATGTTGAATGG CATAATATTAATGACGCATCTAAAAGTAATGTAGAAAAATTATATACAAGAGATTC CTTAAAAAAGAAAGTTAAGAAAATTGTTATCCCAGAAAAAGGACACATTAAACTTA CAGCTTATTATGAAAATACACCAGATTTACCATCCAATTGTATAAAAGAATTGGGAT CATGTATTGTTAAAATAAATGAAAAGAATGATAAAATTGTTGAATCCCACGTTATGA CCACCTTTTCAAATTATGATACATTTACATTTTTAGGTGCACAGACAGTAACCAAGT CTGTTATTAAGTCCAAGGATGAAAAAAAAAAAGCAGATGACAAAACGGAGGATAA GGGAGAAAAAAAAGATGCAAAAGATCAAGAACAAAATGATGATAAAGATCAAACA AATGATAATAACATGAATGAGAAAGATACTAATGATAAAAAAGAAAAAAATAATG

CTAGCCAAACAAAAAGCAAAGCAAGAAAAGGAAAAGGAAAAGGAAAAAGAAAAA GAGAAAGAAAAAGAAAAGGAAAAAATGAAGAGACAACTTGGATGCAAATGAG GAACAAAATAATGAAGCAAAAAATAATGAAGAAAAGGAGAACTCAACAAAAAATG AAAATTCAGCTAATCCAGAGGAATAA Sequence Length: 2622 bp Plasmodium falciparum Calcium-Dependent Protein Kinase(PF-CDPK5), Putative Gene PF3D7_1337800 (Fragment C)

Nucleic acid sequence 255bp (Sequence 1452-1706(255) of gene  PF3D7_1337800 (SEQ ID NO: 45) TTCTTAGCAGCTTGTTTAGATCATAGTATATTTCAACAAGATGTTATCTGTAGAAATGCTTTCA ATGTTTTTGATTTAGATGGTGATGGTGTTATAACAAAGGATGAATTATTTAAAATTCTATCCTT TAGTGCTGTACAAGTATCCTTTAGTAAAGAAATTATTGAAAATCTTATTAAAGAAGTCGATTCT AATAATGATGGATTTATAGATTATGATGATTTTATAAGATGATGACGGGAGTTAAAGAATGA Sequence Length: 255 Amino acid sequence of Fragment C (Pf-CDPK5) (SEQ ID NO: 46) FLAACLDHSIFQQDVICRNAFNVFDLDGDGVITKDELFKILSFSAVQVSFSKEIIENLIKEVDS NNDGFIDYDEFYKMMTGVKE Sequence Length:84 Amino acid sequence of PF3D7_1337800(Pf-CDPK5) (SEQ ID NO: 47) MKETEVEDMDTNRKDGKIKKKEKIVNMKNEEVKSTTKSTLADSDEDYSIITLCTKCLSKK LEDNKNRIILDSKAFKDNRLKGRCSVSSNEDPLDNKLNLSPYFDRSQIIQEIILMNNDEL SDVYEIDRYKLGKGSYGNVVKAVSKRTGQQRAIKIIEKKKIHNIERLKREILIMKQMDHP NIIKLYEVYEDNEKLYLVLELCDGGELFDKIVKYGSFSEYEAYKIMKQIFSALYYCHSKN IMHRDLKPENILYVDNTEDSPIQIIDWGFASKCMNNHNLKSVVGTPYYIAPEILRGKYDK RCDIWSSGVIMYILLCGYPPFNGKNNDEILKKVEKGEFVFDSNYWARVSDDAKDLICQCL NYNYKERIDVEQVLKHRWFKKFKSNNLIINKTLNKTLIEKFKEFHKLCKIKKLAVTCIAY QLNEKDIGKLKKTFEAFDHNGDGVLTISEIFQCLKVNDNEFDRELYFLLKQLDTDGNGLI

Sequence Length: 568 aa  Coding Nucleotide sequence of PF3D7_1337800 (Pf-CDPK5) (SEQ ID NO: 48) ATGAAAGAGACGGAGGTCGAAGATATGGATACGAATAGAAAAGATGGTAAAATTAAAAAG AAAGAAAAAATAGTAAATATGAAAAATGAAGAAGTGAAAAGTACGACAAAGAGTACGTTA GCCGATAGTGATGAAGACTATTCGATTATAACTTTATGTACGAAATGTTTATCTAAAAAA CTTGAAGATAATAAGAATCGAATAATTCTTGATAGTAAAGCTTTTAAAGATAATAGATTA AAAGGTAGATGTAGTGTTAGTTCCAATGAAGATCCTTTAGATAACAAATTAAATTTATCA CCATATTTTGATAGATCCCAAATAATTCAAGAAATAATTTTGATGAATAATGATGAATTA AGTGATGTATATGAAATAGATAGATACAAGTTAGGCAAAGGATCTTATGGAAATGTTGTT AAAGCCGTAAGTAAAAGAACTGGTCAACAGAGAGCTATAAAAATTATAGAGAAAAAGAAA ATTCATAATATTGAAAGATTAAAAAGAGAAATATTAATAATGAAACAGATGGATCATCCT AATATTATAAAATTATATGAAGTTTATGAAGACAATGAAAAATTATATTTAGTATTAGAA TTATGTGACGGTGGAGAATTATTTGATAAAATTGTAAAATATGGTAGCTTCTCTGAATAT GAAGCATATAAAATTATGAAACAAATATTTTCAGCTTTATATTATTGTCATAGTAAAAAT ATTATGCATAGAGATTTAAAACCAGAAAATATTTTATATGTAGATAATACAGAAGATTCT CCTATACAAATAATTGATTGGGGATTCGCTAGTAAATGTATGAATAATCATAATTTGAAA TCAGTTGTTGGGACACCTTATTATATAGCACCCGAAATATTAAGAGGTAAATATGACAAA AGATGTGATATATGGAGTAGTGGTGTAATTATGTATATTTTATTATGTGGATATCCACCA TTTAATGGAAAAAATAATGATGAAATCTTAAAAAAAGTGGAAAAAGGAGAATTTGTTTTC GATTCCAATTATTGGGCAAGAGTTAGTGATGATGCTAAAGATTTAATTTGTCAATGTTTA AATTATAATTATAAAGAAAGAATAGATGTTGAGCAAGTTCTAAAACATAGATGGTTCAAA AAATTTAAATCAAATAATCTTATTATAAATAAAACATTAAATAAAACTTTAATCGAAAAA TTTAAAGAATTCCATAAATTATGTAAAATTAAAAAGCTAGCTGTAACATGTATAGCATAC CAATTAAATGAAAAAGATATAGGGAAATTAAAAAAAACATTTGAAGCTTTTGATCATAAT GGAGATGGAGTATTAACCATATCAGAAATTTTTCAATGTTTAAAAGTTAATGACAATGAA TTTGATAGAGAATTATACTTTTTATTAAAACAACTTGATACAGATGGAAATGGATTAATT

Sequence Length: 1707 bp  PbSEP-1; Gene PBANKA_050600 (PbSEP-1A) Nucleic acid sequence of PB Clone #2 828bp (Sequence 2172-2991 of gene PBANKA_050600) (SEQ ID NO: 65) TTAAAAGATAGTGATGGATATGAGAAATTATTAAAAAATGACATGTACGATTTATATAATATTA AGATGCATGATTTAAATAACTTAAAATCATATGATTTTGAATTTTCAAAAAATTTATTAAAAAA CGAGATTTTTTTTTGTGGTGATAATATAAAAAGTGATGAAATAAATTTAAATGATAATGACATA AATGAAAAGATTGATTCACTAATGAACAATTACAATATTATGAAAAACAAACGTGACAAATTTA ATGAAGAAGAAAACGAAATTCAAAACTTTTTAGCAGAATTAAAAGCTGATGTAACTAATCAACT CAATCTAAATAACGGGGAAGATGAACAGGCTTTTGATTTGCTTAATTCGTTTGATATAAACAAT AACTTTGACGATTTTGTTGGCAACTTTGATGATACAAATGATAACATAGCTCAAAATAAATCAG ACATAGACAATAATAAAGAGTTCGAACACGAAAATGATATAAATCATGATTATAACGATTGTGG TACATATATGGATGATATATATAATAACAATAATGGTGATGATATTTCGAGAAAGGGATCACGT CTGAAATTGTCTGATTTAAATGACGAAAAGAATTTATTTCCAGATGTCAACTCCTCTTTTAATA CTCCTATAAAATCTTCTGAACTAAAGAGAGATTCAGAATGCCAAACAAATTCACCACTTATATT TTCTAGAAGTAATAGAACTCCTAGGAAAAAAAGTGTAGAAGTAATATTAGTAAAGAAAAAATTA AAAAAAAGAAAAGAAAAAGAATCAAATATATCATTTGAAAATACAACACATGATGATTAT Sequence Length: 828 bp PBANKA_050600 (PbSEP-1A aa 724-997) (SEQ ID NO: 66) LKDSDGYEKLLKNDMYDLYNIKMHDLNNLKSYDFEFSKNLLKNEIFFCGDNIKSDEINLNDNDI NEKIDSLMNNYNIMKNKRDKFNEEENEIQNFLAELKADVTNQLNLNNGEDEQAFDLLNSFDINN NFDDFVGNFDDTNDNIAQNKSDIDNNKEFEHENDINHDYNDCGTYMDDIYNNNNGDDISRKGSR LKLSDLNDEKNLFPDVNSSFNTPIKSSELKRDSECQTNSPLIFSRSNRTPRKKSVEVILVKKKL KKRKEKESNISFENTTHDDY Sequence Length: 276 aa Amino acid sequence of Gene PBANKA_050600 (SEQ ID NO: 67) MTDNEDQNKEDLIYYINRYSVNDILGNLEENDKLTNYDENSGICEYEIPFLLENVDNNNN NNTKEHSDRNSVSSYFDDGTCSIISKNDEKHYIDKCEKDKMPKEKINIIFIQNKGEMNSF EDILSMNNASSENLENKLNDRFYQLCCKSIADVNTHNLNKTKNIVKDKKGTLNIEHIDYG DIFLTIRHRLRGREEKTNNMLNNNNNNDNNNNHLYSDMADSVISNWREIKNHENFIKYEN YKEHEKEFIRRKLKKKCVNSLNGDKYFMANRKVFDYYRNNLDSYMTNGNEKDICKQENMS LHFLPKKRKSMNNSSLYNSQIIGQNEYILKNRTFLKKFYIKKNFKQQEHIHNDDYYCDDN HSENLYNDDIYNYNKNLSNRQGNLPSNDFIYSCEIQNKKNSIPHNICVDRNVITPRNSTW NNENEIHEEDMVYYHSQNKGKNSHYVEAENEIQSNHYCEDKNTNSFNEYVNEIDKLDENY NMFNKVEEDDNNNNKENFNIYDGDEIDNNEAFDIKIEENDDYETYNNELELEVEVDDGIG NNIPFNNNDNFVNSNKNEDLDNINNCEHVSNSNHTKYGEEDNEQKAPSITSKDDKDYFDL LIKKYEQTRMSINESSTASLSESIYLSKEGTKEPSLNAHEMLKIASNTKNDVNNKIECLN ENLIDLKNNKEIINEGECFSNGFSIEKNDIEKENDNIVKLGSVYNNDKTEGERGNIGNKN

NRIKTLRYWIGERELTRRNPETGEIDVVGFSECKNLEELSPHIIGPVYYKKMYLRDVNNL HGKGNEDANNNIDRNDNTDEENEITIEINNGMYENEVYNKIQNKENSVNKNDNVSNILKK SINGSIHNRSDNDAITRNGKKKRKKFINVVNYIKKKTKKKLVKVIDKEVEQENENVDNRN TFSNNDNIINDITNVNHNSQNNLDQNFIAISNDFIENDDNIFFDAISLGDNAHINDIPEK SEEIIEAPGVDAIETTKVNGNEKEINLEKEINLEKEINLEKNKDVHVKKKLLDKKKKKKK KKNKGKEKEIDEMYKQLSFLNFNSFYSKGNEDKSKIEILKKTSTKKKGSKIDKEKVDEEN DKHNKNSGKEAKELITKKKKAKNMKKNKKRNMQNKEMKNYYEYTNNEIEKFYNNPNDRIE NEYNMGVDLEASIKTEEEKTEKIGELPILNSYTNEQYEHITNTNDITNSKSENFELHKNE DEEVEKLQTSTRRKKKKKSESLIHDTNELNKKRRKTDGNNSGELISINENDEIKNVDADK KINDKEGKYIKKVDKDTIMGSNGNNIDELNKDFEDNDQIKNIKKDEKKKETNTDGSNNMR NINLLEEIDANEKNSTLCLVTHNKKNNTNSQSFIIDKLKSYFNIKELINVKKQKTNNVIL NTFENKQIINNNPIRISLSYPSSVELSVENRCNQTRNGQFPLIQKNLSNFKVDINLFCVQ IFPNKAHSSNSYDKILIGYIYQGKKVKIYFKNQERYFEKDEFFYIPKYSPFKIVNISRDN CILYVYPINK Sequence Length: 1810 aa Coding Nucleotide sequence of PBANKA_050600 (SEQ ID NO: 68) ATGACAGACAACGAGGATCAAAATAAAGAAGATCTGATATATTACATAAATAGATACAGT GTCAATGATATATTGGGAAATTTAGAAGAAAATGATAAGTTAACAAATTATGATGAAAAT AGCGGAATATGTGAATATGAAATTCCATTTCTTTTGGAAAATGTCGATAATAATAATAAT AATAATACTAAAGAACATTCCGATAGAAATTCTGTATCTAGTTATTTCGATGATGGAACA TGTTCGATTATTTCTAAAAATGATGAAAAACATTATATAGACAAATGTGAAAAAGACAAA ATGCCAAAGGAAAAAATAAATATTATATTTATTCAGAATAAAGGTGAAATGAATAGCTTT GAAGATATTTTATCCATGAATAATGCAAGCAGTGAAAATTTAGAAAACAAGTTAAATGAT AGATTTTATCAACTATGTTGTAAAAGTATTGCTGATGTGAACACCCACAATTTAAATAAA ACTAAAAATATTGTAAAAGATAAAAAAGGGACATTGAATATTGAGCATATAGATTATGGT GATATATTTTTAACCATTCGTCATCGTCTAAGAGGGCGTGAAGAAAAAACGAATAACATG CTAAATAATAATAATAATAATGATAATAATAATAATCATTTATATAGTGACATGGCTGAT AGTGTTATTAGTAATTGGAGGGAAATAAAAAATCATGAAAATTTTATAAAATATGAAAAC TATAAAGAGCATGAAAAGGAGTTTATAAGGAGGAAATTGAAAAAGAAATGCGTCAATAGT TTAAATGGAGATAAATATTITATGGCCAATAGAAAAGTATTTGATTATTATCGTAATAAT TTAGATAGTTACATGACTAATGGGAATGAAAAAGATATATGCAAGCAAGAAAATATGTCT CTACATTTTTTACCAAAAAAGAGAAAATCAATGAATAATAGTTCTTTATACAATTCTCAA ATAATTGGACAAAATGAATATATTTTAAAGAATAGAACATTTTTAAAAAAATTTTATATA AAAAAAAATTTTAAGCAACAAGAACATATCCATAATGATGATTATTATTGTGATGATAAT CATAGTGAAAATTTATATAATGATGATATATATAATTATAATAAAAACTTGAGTAATAGA CAAGGTAATCTACCCAGCAATGATTTTATTTATTCATGTGAAATTCAAAATAAGAAAAAT TCAATACCACATAATATATGTGTCGATAGAAATGTAATAACCCCACGGAACAGTACATGG AATAATGAAAACGAAATTCACGAAGAGGATATGGTTTATTATCATTCTCAAAATAAGGGA AAAAATTCACATTATGTAGAAGCAGAAAATGAAATACAATCAAATCATTATTGTGAAGAT AAAAATACAAACAGTTTTAACGAATATGTTAATGAAATTGATAAACTCGATGAAAATTAT AATATGTTTAACAAAGTTGAAGAGGACGATAATAATAATAACAAAGAAAATTTTAACATT TATGATGGTGATGAAATAGATAATAACGAAGCATTTGATATCAAAATCGAAGAAAATGAT GATTATGAAACATATAACAACGAATTAGAATTAGAGGTAGAGGTAGATGATGGAATAGGT AATAATATTCCATTTAATAATAATGATAATTTTGTAAATTCAAATAAGAATGAAGATTTG GATAATATAAATAATTGTGAACATGTTTCAAATTCAAATCATACAAAATATGGGGAAGAA GACAATGAGCAAAAAGCTCCATCAATAACCAGTAAAGATGATAAAGATTATTTTGATTTA CTAATAAAAAAATATGAACAAACTAGAATGTCAATTAATGAATCTAGTACAGCCTCACTT AGTGAAAGTATTTATTTATCAAAAGAAGGAACAAAAGAACCTTCTTTAAATGCTCACGAA ATGTTAAAAATCGCATCTAACACAAAGAATGATGTAAATAATAAAATTGAATGTTTGAAT GAAAACTTAATAGATTTAAAAAATAACAAGGAAATTATTAATGAAGGGGAATGTTTTAGT AATGGTTTTTCTATCGAAAAAAATGACATAGAAAAGGAAAATGATAATATAGTAAAATTA GGAAGTGTATATAATAATGACAAAACAGAGGGGGAAAGAGGGAATATTGGAAACAAAAAT

ACTGTTGGTACAACTACTGCTACTAGTAGCATCAATTCGAAAAGAAGATATCCTAAAAGA AATAGAATAAAAACGTTGCGATACTGGATAGGTGAAAGGGAACTTACTAGAAGAAATCCT GAAACAGGCGAAATAGATGTTGTAGGTTTTAGTGAATGCAAAAATTTAGAAGAATTATCT CCTCATATTATTGGTCCAGTTTATTATAAAAAAATGTATTTACGAGATGTGAATAATTTA CATGGAAAAGGAAACGAAGATGCTAACAACAATATAGATAGAAATGATAATACTGATGAA GAAAATGAAATAACGATAGAAATCAATAATGGAATGTATGAAAATGAAGTGTATAATAAA ATTCAGAATAAAGAGAATTCTGTGAATAAAAATGATAATGTTAGTAACATATTGAAAAAA AGTATAAATGGTAGCATTCATAATAGAAGTGATAATGATGCAATAACTAGAAATGGGAAA AAGAAAAGAAAAAAGTTTATTAATGTTGTTAATTATATTAAAAAAAAAACAAAAAAAAAA TTAGTCAAAGTTATAGATAAAGAAGTAGAGCAGGAAAATGAAAATGTAGATAATCGTAAC ACTTTTTCAAATAATGATAATATAATTAATGACATAACAAATGTCAATCACAATTCTCAA AATAATTTGGATCAAAATTTTATTGCAATTAGTAATGATTTTATTGAAAATGATGACAAT ATTTTTTTCGATGCGATTAGTCTTGGCGATAATGCTCACATAAATGATATTCCAGAAAAA AGCGAAGAAATTATTGAAGCACCAGGAGTAGATGCAATTGAAACGACTAAAGTTAATGGA AACGAAAAGGAAATCAATTTAGAAAAGGAAATCAATTTAGAAAAGGAAATCAATTTAGAA AAGAATAAAGATGTACATGTGAAAAAGAAATTATTAGATAAAAAGAAAAAGAAAAAAAAA AAGAAAAACAAGGGAAAAGAAAAGGAAATAGACGAAATGTACAAGCAATTATCATTTTTG AATTTTAATTCGTTTTATTCTAAAGGAAATGAAGATAAATCAAAAATAGAAATTTTGAAA AAAACAAGTACCAAAAAAAAAGGGAGTAAAATTGATAAAGAAAAGGTAGATGAGGAAAAT GATAAACATAATAAAAATTCGGGAAAGGAAGCCAAAGAATTAATTACAAAAAAAAAGAAA GCCAAGAATATGAAGAAAAATAAAAAGAGAAATATGCAGAATAAAGAAATGAAAAATTAT TATGAATATACAAATAATGAAATCGAAAAGTTCTACAACAATCCAAATGATAGAATAGAG AATGAATACAATATGGGAGTCGATTTAGAAGCATCAATAAAAACTGAAGAAGAAAAAACA GAAAAAATTGGAGAGTTGCCCATTTTAAATTCATATACTAATGAGCAATATGAGCACATA ACGAATACAAATGATATAACAAATTCGAAAAGTGAAAATTTTGAACTCCACAAAAATGAA GACGAAGAAGTGGAAAAGCTACAAACTTCTACACGTCGAAAAAAGAAAAAAAAAAGTGAA AGTTTAATTCATGATACAAATGAATTGAATAAAAAGCGAAGAAAAACAGATGGAAATAAT TCAGGGGAATTAATTTCTATTAATGAAAATGATGAGATAAAAAATGTAGATGCTGATAAA AAAATAAATGACAAAGAAGGTAAATATATAAAGAAAGTTGACAAGGATACAATTATGGGA TCAAATGGAAATAATATTGATGAATTAAATAAGGATTTTGAAGATAATGATCAAATTAAA AATATAAAAAAAGATGAAAAAAAAAAAGAGACAAATACAGATGGTTCTAATAATATGAGA AATATAAATTTATTAGAAGAAATAGATGCAAATGAAAAAAATAGTACATTATGTTTGGTA ACTCACAATAAAAAAAATAATACGAATAGTCAAAGTTTTATTATAGATAAATTAAAATCG TATTTCAATATAAAAGAGTTAATAAATGTCAAAAAACAAAAAACAAATAATGTAATATTA AATACTTTTGAAAATAAACAAATAATAAATAATAATCCTATACGTATTTCTCTTTCCTAT CCTTCTAGTGTAGAATTATCAGTTGAAAATAGATGCAACCAAACAAGAAATGGACAATTT CCACTTATACAAAAGAACTTAAGCAACTTCAAGGTAGACATAAATTTATTTTGTGTTCAA ATTTTCCCAAACAAAGCACATAGCTCGAATAGTTATGATAAAATTTTGATTGGGTATATA TATCAGGGAAAAAAGGTAAAGATTTATTTTAAGAACCAAGAAAGATATTTTGAAAAGGAT GAGTTTTTTTACATACCCAAATACTCTCCTTTCAAAATTGTCAACATAAGCAGGGACAAT TGTATTTTATATGTTTATCCAATAAATAAATAA Sequence Length: 5434 bp SERA5 (serine repeat antigen 5) PlasmoDB ID: PF3D7_0207600 Chromosome 2; position 303,593-307,027 Full Sequence: base pairs 1-2994 (excluding introns) (SEQ ID NO: 69) ATGAAGTCATATATTTCCTTGTTTTTCATATTGTGTGTTATATTTAACAAAAATGTTATAAAAT GTACAGGAGAAAGTCAAACAGGTAATACAGGAGGAGGTCAAGCAGGTAATACAGGAGGAGATCA AGCAGGTAGTACAGGAGGAAGTCCACAAGGTAGTACGGGAGCAAGTCCACAAGGTAGTACGGGA GCAAGTCCACAAGGTAGTACGGGAGCAAGTCAACCCGGAAGTTCCGAACCAAGCAATCCTGTAA GTTCCGGACATTCTGTAAGTACTGTATCAGTATCACAAACTTCAACTTCTTCAGAAAAACAGGA TACAATTCAAGTAAAATCAGCTTTATTAAAAGATTATATGGGTTTAAAAGTTACTGGTCCATGT AACGAAAATTTCATAATGTTCTTAGTTCCTCATATATATATTGATGTTGATACAGAAGATACTA ATATCGAATTAAGAACAACATTGAAAAAAACAAATAATGCAATATCATTTGAATCAAACAGTGG TTCATTAGAAAAAAAAAAATATGTAAAACTACCATCAAATGGTACAACTGGTGAACAAGGTTCA AGTACGGGAACAGTTAGAGGAGATACAGAACCAATTTCAGATTCAAGCTCAAGTTCAAGTTCAA GCTCTAGTTCAAGTTCAAGTTCAAGTTCAAGTTCTAGTTCAAGTTCTAGTTCAAGTTCAGAAAG TCTTCCTGCTAATGGACCTGATTCCCCTACTGTTAAACCGCCAAGAAATTTACAAAATATATGT GAAACTGGAAAAAACTTCAAGTTGGTAGTATATATTAAGGAGAATACATTAATACTTAAATGGA AAGTATACGGAGAAACAAAAGATACTACTGAAAATAACAAAGTTGATGTAAGAAAGTATTTGAT AAATGAAAAGGAAACCCCATTTACTAATATACTAATACATGCGTATAAAGAACATAATGGAACA AACTTAATAGAAAGTAAAAACTACGCAATAGGATCAGACATTCCAGAAAAATGTGATACCTTAG CTTCCAATTGCTTTTTAAGTGGTAATTTTAACATTGAAAAATGCTTTCAATGTGCTCTTTTAGT AGAAAAAGAAAATAAAAATGACGTATGTTACAAATACCTATCTGAAGATATTGTAAGTAAATTC AAAGAAATAAAAGCTGAGACAGAAGATGATGATGAAGATGATTATACTGAATATAAATTAACAG AATCTATTGATAATATATTAGTAAAAATGTTTAAAACAAATGAAAATAATGATAAATCAGAATT AATAAAATTAGAAGAAGTAGATGATAGTTTGAAATTAGAATTAATGAATTACTGTAGTTTACTT AAAGACGTAGATACAACAGGTACCTTAGATAATTATGGGATGGGAAATGAAATGGATATATTTA ATAACTTAAAGAGATTATTAATTTATCATTCAGAAGAAAATATTAATACTTTAAAAAATAAATT CCGTAATGCAGCTGTATGTCTTAAAAATGTTGATGATTGGATTGTAAATAAGAGAGGTTTAGTA TTACCTGAATTAAATTATGATTTAGAATATTTCAATGAACATTTATATAATGATAAAAATTCTC CAGAAGATAAAGATAATAAAGGAAAAGGTGTCGTACATGTTGATACAACTTTAGAAAAAGAAGA TACTTTATCATATGATAACTCAGATAATATGTTTTGTAATAAAGAATATTGTAACAGATTAAAA GATGAAAATAATTGTATATCTAATCTTCAAGTTGAAGATCAAGGTAATTGTGATACTTCATGGA TTTTTGCTTCAAAATATCATTTAGAAACTATTAGATGTATGAAAGGATATGAACCTACCAAAAT TTCTGCTCTTTATGTAGCTAATTGTTATAAAGGTGAACATAAAGATAGATGTGATGAAGGTTCT AGTCCAATGGAATTCTTACAAATTATTGAAGATTATGGATTCTTACCAGCAGAATCAAATTATC CATATAACTATGTGAAAGTTGGAGAACAATGTCCAAAGGTAGAAGATCACTGGATGAATCTATG GGATAATGGAAAAATCTTACATAACAAAAATGAACCTAATAGTTTAGATGGTAAGGGATATACT GCATATGAAAGTGAAAGATTTCATGATAATATGGATGCATTTGTTAAAATTATTAAAACTGAAG TAATGAATAAAGGTTCAGTTATTGCATATATTAAAGCTGAAAATGTTATGGGATATGAATTTAG TGGAAAGAAAGTACAGAACTTATGTGGTGATGATACAGCTGATCATGCAGTTAATATTGTTGGT TATGGTAATTATGTGAATAGCGAAGGAGAAAAAAAATCCTATTGGATTGTAAGAAACAGTTGGG GTCCATATTGGGGAGATGAAGGTTATTTTAAAGTAGATATGTATGGACCAACTCATTGTCATTT TAACTTTATTCACAGTGTTGTTATATTCAATGTTGATTTACCTATGAATAATAAAACAACTAAA AAAGAATCAAAAATATATGATTATTATTTAAAGGCCTCTCCAGAATTTTATCATAACCTTTACT TTAAGAATTTTAATGTTGGTAAGAAAAATTTATTCTCTGAAAAGGAAGATAATGAAAACAACAA AAAATTAGGTAACAACTATATTATATTCGGTCAAGATACGGCAGGATCAGGACAAAGTGGAAAG GAAAGCAATACTGCATTAGAATCTGCAGGAACTTCAAATGAAGTCTCAGAACGTGTTCATGTTT ATCACATATTAAAACATATAAAGGATGGCAAAATAAGAATGGGTATGCGTAAATATATAGATAC ACAAGATGTAAATAAGAAACATTCTTGTACAAGATCCTATGCATTTAATCCAGAGAATTATGAA AAATGTGTAAATTTATGTAATGTGAACTGGAAAACATGCGAGGAAAAAACATCACCAGGACTTT GTTTATCCAAATTGGATACAAATAACGAATGTTATTTCTGTTATGTATAA Full Sequence: 1-997 amino acids (SEQ ID NO: 70) MKSYISLFFILCVIFNKNVIKCTGESQTGNTGGGQAGNTGGDQAGSTGGSPQGSTGASPQGSTG ASPQGSTGASQPGSSEPSNPVSSGHSVSTVSVSQTSTSSEKQDTIQVKSALLKDYMGLKVTGPC NENFIMFLVPHIYIDVDTEDTNIELRTTLKKTNNAISFESNSGSLEKKKYVKLPSNGTTGEQGS STGTVRGDTEPISDSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESLPANGPDSPTVKPPRNLQNIC ETGKNFKLVVYIKENTLILKWKVYGETKDTTENNKVDVRKYLINEKETPFTNILIHAYKEHNGT NLIESKNYAIGSDIPEKCDTLASNCFLSGNFNIEKCFQCALLVEKENKNDVCYKYLSEDIVSKF KEIKAETEDDDEDDYTEYKLTESIDNILVKMFKTNENNDKSELIKLEEVDDSLKLELMNYCSLL KDVDTTGTLDNYGMGNEMDIFNNLKRLLIYHSEENINTLKNKFRNAAVCLKNVDDWIVNKRGLV LPELNYDLEYFNEHLYNDKNSPEDKDNKGKGVVHVDTTLEKEDTLSYDNSDNMFCNKEYCNRLK DENNCISNLQVEDQGNCDTSWIFASKYHLETIRCMKGYEPTKISALYVANCYKGEHKDRCDEGS SPMEFLQIIEDYGFLPAESNYPYNYVKVGEQCPKVEDHWMNLWDNGKILHNKNEPNSLDGKGYT AYESERFHDNMDAFVKIIKTEVMNKGSVIAYIKAENVMGYEFSGKKVQNLCGDDTADHAVNIVG YGNYVNSEGEKKSYWIVRNSWGPYWGDEGYFKVDMYGPTHCHFNFIHSVVIFNVDLPMNNKTTK KESKIYDYYLKASPEFYHNLYFKNFNVGKKNLFSEKEDNENNKKLGNNYTIFGQDTAGSGQSGK ESNTALESAGTSNEVSERVHVYHILKHIKDGKIRMGMRKYIDTQDVNKKHSCTRSYAFNPENYE KCVNLCNVNWKTCEEKTSPGLCLSKLDTNNECYFCYV Y2H Clone name: 1 7-1 (nucleotide 2433-2994 amino acids 561 base pairs (SEQ ID NO: 71) AACTTTATTCACAGTGTTGTTATATTCAATGTTGATTTACCTATGAATAATAAAACAAC TAAAAAAGAATCAAAAATATATGATTATTATTTAAAGGCCTCTCCAGAATTTTATCATACCTT TACTTTAAGAATTTTAATGTTGGTAAGAAAAATTTATTCTCTGAAAAGGAAGATAATGAAAACA ACAAAAAATTAGGTAACAACTATATTATATTCGGTCAAGATACGGCAGGATCAGGACAAAGTGG AAAGGAAAGCAATACTGCATTAGAATCTGCAGGAACTTCAAATGAAGTCTCAGAACGTGTTCAT GTTTATCACATATTAAAACATATAAAGGATGGCAAAATAAGAATGGGTATGCGTAAATATATAG ATACACAAGATGTAAATAAGAAACATTCTTGTACAAGATCCTATGCATTTAATCCAGAGAATTA TGAAAAATGTGTAAATTTATGTAATGTGAACTGGAAAACATGCGAGGAAAAAACATCACCAGGA CTTTGTTTATCCAAATTGGATACAAATAACGAATGTTATTTCTGTTATGTATAA 186 amino acids (SEQ ID NO: 72) NFIHSVVIFNVDLPMNNKTTKKESKIYDYYLKASPEFYHNLYFKNFNVGKKNLFSEKEDNENNK KLGNNYIIFGQDTAGSGQSGKESNTALESAGTSNEVSERVHVYHILKHIKDGKIRMGMRKYIDT QDVNKKHSCTRSYAFNPENYEKCVNLCNVNWKTCEEKTSPGLCLSKLDTNNECYFCYV SUB1 (subtilisin-like protease 1) PlasmoDB ID: PF3D7_0507500 Chromosome 5; position 307,490-309,556 Full Sequence: base pairs 1-2067 (excluding introns) (SEQ ID NO: 73) ATGATGCTCAATAAAAAAGTTGTTGCTTTGTGCACACTTACCTTACATCTTTTTTGTATATTTC TATGTCTAGGAAAGGAAGTAAGGTCTGAAGAAAATGGGAAAATACAAGATGATGCTAAAAAGAT TGTTAGCGAATTACGATTCCTAGAAAAAGTAGAAGATGTTATTGAAAAGAGTAACATAGGAGGG AATGAGGTAGATGCCGATGAAAATTCATTTAATCCGGATACTGAGGTTCCCATAGAAGAGATAG AAGAAATAAAAATGAGGGAACTGAAAGATGTAAAGGAAGAAAAAAATAAAAATGACAACCATAA TAATAATAATAATAATATTAGTAGTAGTAGTAGTAGTAGTAGTAATACTTTTGGTGAAGAAAAA GAAGAAGTATCTAAGAAAAAAAAAAAGTTAAGACTTATAGTTAGCGAGAATCATGCAACTACCC CCTCGTTTTTCCAAGAATCCCTTTTAGAACCTGATGTTTTATCCTTTTTAGAAAGTAAAGGGAA TTTGTCCAACTTGAAAAATATCAATTCTATGATTATAGAACTAAAGGAAGATACAACGGATGAT GAATTAATATCTTATATTAAAATTCTTGAGGAGAAGGGAGCTTTGATTGAATCAGATAAATTAG TGAGTGCAGATAATATTGATATAAGTGGTATAAAAGATGCTATAAGAAGAGGTGAAGAAAATAT TGATGTTAATGATTATAAAAGTATGTTAGAAGTCGAAAATGATGCTGAAGATTATGATAAAATG TTTGGTATGTTTAATGAATCACATGCTGCAACATCTAAAAGGAAACGCCATTCAACAAATGAGC GTGGATATGATACATTTTCATCACCTTCATATAAGACATATTCAAAAAGTGATTATTTATATGA TGATGATAATAATAATAATAATTATTATTATAGTCATAGTAGTAATGGTCATAATAGTAGTAGT CGTAATAGTAGTAGTAGTCGTAGTAGACCAGGTAAATATCATTTCAATGATGAATTTCGTAATT TGCAATGGGGTTTAGATTTATCCAGATTAGATGAAACACAAGAATTAATTAACGAACATCAAGT GATGAGTACTCGTATATGTGTTATAGATAGTGGTATTGATTATAATCATCCCGATTTAAAAGAT AATATTGAATTAAATTTAAAAGAATTACATGGAAGGAAAGGTTTTGATGATGATAATAATGGTA TAGTTGATGATATATATGGTGCTAATTTTGTAAATAATTCAGGAAACCCGATGGATGATAATTA TCATGGTACTCATGTATCAGGAATTATATCTGCCATAGGAAATAATAATATAGGTGTTGTAGGT GTTGATGTAAATTCAAAATTAATTATTTGTAAAGCATTAGATGAACATAAATTAGGAAGATTAG GAGATATGTTCAAATGTTTAGATTATTGTATAAGTAGAAATGCACATATGATAAATGGAAGCTT TTCATTTGATGAATATAGTGGTATTTTTAATTCTTCTGTAGAATATTTACAAAGAAAAGGTATC CTCTTTTTTGTATCTGCAAGTAATTGTAGTCATCCTAAATCGTCAACACCAGATATTAGAAAAT GTGATTTATCCATAAATGCAAAATATCCCCCTATCTTATCTACTGTTTATGATAATGTTATATC TGTTGCTAATTTAAAAAAAAATGATAATAATAATCATTATTCATTATCCATTAATTCTTTTTAT AGCAATAAATATTGTCAACTAGCTGCACCAGGAACTAATATATATTCTACTGCTCCACATAATT CATATCGAAAATTAAATGGTACATCTATGGCTGCTCCACATGTAGCTGCAATAGCATCACTCAT ATTTTCTATTAATCCTGACTTATCATATAAAAAAGTTATACAAATATTAAAAGATTCTATTGTA TATCTCCCTTCCTTAAAAAATATGGTTGCATGGGCAGGATATGCAGATATAAATAAGGCAGTCA ATTTAGCCATAAAATCAAAAAAAACATATATCAATTCTAATATATCTAACAAGTGGAAAAAAAA AAGTAGATATTTGCATTAA Full Sequence: 1-688 amino acids (SEQ ID NO: 74) MMLNKKVVALCTLTLHLFCIFLCLGKEVRSEENGKIQDDAKKIVSELRFLEKVEDVIEKSNIGG NEVDADENSFNPDTEVPIEEIEEIKMRELKDVKEEKNKNDNHNNNNNNISSSSSSSSNTFGEEK EEVSKKKKKLRLIVSENHATTPSFFQESLLEPDVLSFLESKGNLSNLKNINSMIIELKEDTTDD ELISYIKILEEKGALIESDKLVSADNIDISGIKDAIRRGEENIDVNDYKSMLEVENDAEDYDKM FGMFNESHAATSKRKRHSTNERGYDTFSSPSYKTYSKSDYLYDDDNNNNNYYYSHSSNGHNSSS RNSSSSRSRPGKYHFNDEFRNLQWGLDLSRLDETQELINEHQVMSTRICVIDSGIDYNHPDLKD NIELNLKELHGRKGFDDDNNGIVDDIYGANFVNNSGNPMDDNYHGTHVSGIISAIGNNNIGVVG VDVNSKLIICKALDEHKLGRLGDMFKCLDYCISRNAHMINGSFSFDEYSGIFNSSVEYLQRKGI LFFVSASNCSHPKSSTPDIRKCDLSINAKYPPILSTVYDNVISVANLKKNDNNNHYSLSINSFY SNKYCQLAAPGTNIYSTAPHNSYRKLNGTSMAAPHVAAIASLIFSINPDLSYKKVIQILKDSIV YLPSLKNMVAWAGYADINKAVNLAIKSKKTYINSNISNKWKKKSRYLH PKG (cGMP-dependent protein kinase) PlasmoDB ID: PF3D7_1436600 Chromosome 14; position 1,490,654-1,494,214 Full Sequence: base pairs 1-2562 (excluding introns) (SEQ ID NO: 75) ATGGAAGAAGATGATAATCTAAAAAAAGGGAATGAAAGAAATAAAAAGAAGGCTATATTTTCAAATGATG ATTTTACAGGAGAAGATAGTTTAATGGAGGATCATTTAGAACTTCGGGAAAAGCTTTCAGAAGATATTGA TATGATAAAGACTTCCTTAAAAAATAATCTAGTTTGTAGTACATTAAACGATAATGAAATATTGACTCTG TCTAATTATATGCAATTCTTTGTTTTTAAAAGTGGAAATTTAGTAATAAAACAAGGGGAAAAAGGGTCAT ACTTTTTCATTATTAATAGTGGCAAATTTGACGTTTATGTAAATGATAAAAAAGTAAAGACTATGGGAAA AGGTAGTTCTTTCGGTGAAGCTGCTTTAATTCATAATACCCAAAGAAGTGCAACTATTATTGCAGAAACT GATGGAACTCTATGGGGAGTTCAAAGAAGTACATTTAGAGCTACCCTAAAACAATTATCTAATAGAAATT TTAACGAAAACAGAACATTTATCGATTCCGTTTCAGTTTTTGATATGTTAACTGAAGCACAAAAAAACAT GATTACTAATGCTTGTGTAATACAAAACTTTAAATCTGGTGAAACCATTGTTAAACAAGGAGATTATGGA GATGTCTTATACATTTTGAAAGAAGGAAAGGCTACAGTATATATTAACGATGAAGAGATAAGGGTTTTAG AGAAAGGTTCCTATTTTGGGGAAAGAGCTCTACTGTATGATGAACCAAGAAGTGCAACAATCATTGCAAA AGAACCAACCGCTTGTGCATCCATTTGTAGGAAATTATTAAATATTGTTCTAGGAAACTTACAAGTAGTT TTATTTCGTAATATTATGACTGAAGCTTTACAACAGAGTGAAATTTTTAAACAATTTAGTGGGGATCAAT TAAACGATTTAGCAGATACCGCCATTGTTCGAGATTATCCAGCTAATTATAATATATTACATAAGGATAA GGTAAAATCCGTTAAATATATTATTGTATTGGAAGGTAAAGTAGAATTATTTCTTGATGATACTTCTATT GGTATATTATCCAGAGGAATGTCTTTTGGAGATCAATATGTATTAAATCAGAAACAACCATTTAAGCATA CTATTAAATCATTAGAAGTTTGTAAAATCGCATTAATAACGGAAACTTGTTTAGCTGATTGTCTAGGAAA TAATAATATTGATGCATCTATTGATTATAATAATAAAAAAAGTATTATAAAGAAAATGTATATCTTTAGA TACTTAACTGATAAACAATGTAATTTATTAATTGAAGCTTTTAGAACCACAAGATATGAAGAAGGTGATT ATATAATACAAGAAGGAGAAGTAGGATCTAGATTTTATATAATAAAAAATGGAGAAGTAGAAATAGTAAA AAATAAAAAAAGGTTACGTACCTTAGGAAAGAATGATTACTTTGGTGAAAGAGCTTTATTATATGATGAA CCAAGAACAGCTTCTGTTATAAGTAAAGTAAATAATGTTGAATGTTGGTTTGTTGATAAAAGTGTGTTTT TACAAATTATACAAGGACCTATGTTAGCACATTTGGAAGAAAGAATAAAAATGCAAGATACTAAAGTAGA AATGGATGAACTAGAAACAGAACGAATTATTGGAAGAGGTACTTTCGGAACAGTTAAATTAGTTCATCAT AAACCAACAAAAATAAGATATGCTTTAAAATGTGTTAGTAAAAGAAGTATTATTAATTTAAATCAACAAA ACAATATAAAATTAGAAAGAGAAATAACAGCAGAAAATGATCATCCATTTATTATAAGATTAGTAAGAAC ATTTAAAGATTCTAAATATTTCTATTTTCTAACAGAATTAGTAACAGGTGGAGAATTATATGATGCTATT AGAAAATTAGGTTTATTATCTAAATCACAAGCTCAATTTTATTTAGGTTCTATCATTTTAGCTATTGAAT ATTTACATGAAAGAAATATTGTATATAGAGATTTAAAACCAGAAAACATTTTATTAGATAAACAAGGTTA TGTAAAACTAATCGATTTTGGTTGTGCCAAAAAGGTACAAGGTAGAGCTTATACATTAGTAGGTACACCT CATTATATGGCACCTGAGGTTATTTTAGGAAAAGGTTATGGATGTACTGTTGACATATGGGCATTGGGAA TATGCCTATATGAATTTATATGTGGTCCATTACCATTTGGTAATGATGAAGAAGATCAATTAGAAATTTT CCGTGATATATTAACCGGCCAACTTACATTTCCAGATTATGTAACAGACACAGATAGCATAAATTTGATG AAAAGACTTCTATGTAGATTACCTCAAGGAAGAATTGGTTGTTCAATAAATGGCTTCAAAGACATAAAGG ATCACCCATTTTTCTCAAACTTTAATTGGGATAAATTGGCTGGTCGTTTGCTTGATCCGCCTTTAGTATC AAAAAGTGAAACTTATGCAGAAGATATTGATATTAAACAAATAGAGGAGGAGGATGCTGAGGATGATGAG GAACCATTGAACGATGAAGACAACTGGGACATAGATTTTTAA Full Sequence: 1-853 amino acids (SEQ ID NO: 76) MEEDDNLKKGNERNKKKAIFSNDDFTGEDSLMEDHLELREKLSEDIDMIKTSLKNNLVCSTLNDNEILTL SNYMQFFVFKSGNLVIKQGEKGSYFFIINSGKFDVYVNDKKVKTMGKGSSFGEAALIHNTQRSATIIAET DGTLWGVQRSTFRATLKQLSNRNFNENRIFIDSVSVEDMLTEAQKNMITNACVIQNFKSGETIVKQGDYG DVLYILKEGKATVYINDEEIRVLEKGSYFGERALLYDEPRSATIIAKEPTACASICRKLLNIVLGNLQVV LFRNIMTEALQQSEIFKQFSGDQLNDLADTAIVRDYPANYNILHKDKVKSVKYIIVLEGKVELFLDDTSI GILSRGMSFGDQYVLNQKQPFKHTIKSLEVCKIALITETCLADCLGNNNIDASIDYNNKKSIIKKMYIFR YLTDKQCNLLIEAFRTTRYEEGDYIIQEGEVGSRFYIIKNGEVEIVKNKKRLRTLGKNDYFGERALLYDE PRTASVISKVNNVECWFVDKSVFLQIIQGPMLAHLEERIKMQDTKVEMDELETERIIGRGTFGTVKLVHH KPTKIRYALKCVSKRSIINLNQQNNIKLEREITAENDHPFIIRLVRTFKDSKYFYFLTELVTGGELYDAI RKLGLLSKSQAQFYLGSIILAIEYLHERNIVYRDLKPENILLDKQGYVKLIDEGCAKKVQGRAYTLVGTP HYMAPEVILGKGYGCTVDIWALGICLYEFICGPLPFGNDEEDQLEIFRDILTGQLTFPDYVTDTDSINLM KRLLCRLPQGRIGCSINGFKDIKDHPFFSNFNWDKLAGRLLDPPLVSKSETYAEDIDIKQIEEEDAEDDE EPLNDEDNWDIDF

Underlined amino acid sequences and cDNA nucleic acid sequences correspond to immunorelevant regions of the gene products and nucleic acids encoding them. The antigenic fragments (polypeptides) were identified by virtue of binding of antibodies from patients that are resistant to malaria.

The invention encompasses “fragments” and “peptides” of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, or 43, 47, 67, 70, 74, or 76 preferably, the clone 2 polypeptide or the PF10_0212a polypeptide (a.k.a., PfSEP-1A; SEQ ID NO:2) described herein. Such peptides represent portions of the polypeptide that have, for example, specific immunogenic or binding properties. A fragment can be between 3-10 amino acids, 10-20 amino acids, 20-40 amino acids, 40-56 amino acids in length or even longer. Amino acid sequences having at least 70% amino acid identity, preferably at least 80% amino acid identity, more preferably at least 90% identity, and most preferably 95% identity to the fragments described herein are also included within the scope of the present invention.

Furthermore, the present invention encompasses fragments and derivatives of the nucleic acid sequences of the present invention, as well as fragments and portions of the amino acid sequences of the present invention.

A “polynucleotide” is a nucleic acid polymer of ribonucleic acid (RNA), deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), modified RNA or DNA, or RNA or DNA mimetics (such as PNAs), and derivatives thereof, and homologues thereof. Thus, polynucleotides include polymers composed of naturally occurring nucleobases, sugars and covalent inter-nucleoside (backbone) linkages as well as polymers having non-naturally-occurring portions that function similarly. Such modified or substituted nucleic acid polymers are well known in the art and for the purposes of the present invention, are referred to as “analogues.” Oligonucleotides are generally short polynucleotides from about 10 to up to about 160 or 200 nucleotides.

A “variant polynucleotide” or a “variant nucleic acid sequence” means a polynucleotide having at least about 60% nucleic acid sequence identity, more preferably at least about 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% nucleic acid sequence identity and yet more preferably at least about 99% nucleic acid sequence identity with the nucleic acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 1, 4, 5, 8, 9, 12, 13, 16, 17, 20, 21, 24, 25, 28, 29, 32, 33, 36, 37, 40, 41, 44, 45, or 48, preferably SEQ ID NO: 1. Variants do not encompass the native nucleotide sequence. Other variant polynucleotides include those that differ from SEQ ID NO: 1, but because of the redundancy of the genetic code, encode a polypeptide of SEQ ID No: 2, or amino acids 2-50 of SEQ ID No: 2, fragments of variants thereof.

Ordinarily, variant polynucleotides are at least about 8 nucleotides in length, often at least about 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60 nucleotides in length, or even about 75-200 nucleotides in length, or more.

In general, a polypeptide variant preserves antigenic function and includes any variant in which residues at a particular position in the sequence have been substituted by other amino acids, and further includes the possibility of inserting an additional residue or residues between two residues of the parent polypeptide as well as the possibility of deleting one or more residues from the parent sequence. comprising

“A polypeptide variant” means a polypeptide having at least about 70% amino acid sequence identity with an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2 or SEQ ID NO:3 . For example, polypeptide variants include those wherein one or more amino acid residues are added or deleted at the N- or C-terminus of the full-length native amino acid sequence. A polypeptide variant will have at least about 71%-75% amino acid sequence identity; at least about 76%-79% amino acid sequence identity; at least about 80% amino acid sequence identity, at least about 81% amino acid sequence identity, at least about 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% amino acid sequence identity and at least about 99% amino acid sequence identity with a full-length sequence. Ordinarily, variant polypeptides are at least about 10 amino acids in length, often at least about 20 amino acids in length, more often at least about 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 150, 200, or 300 amino acids in length, or more.

Useful conservative substitutions are shown in Table 2 below. Conservative substitutions whereby an amino acid of one class is replaced with another amino acid of the same type fall within the scope of the subject invention so long as the substitution does not materially alter the biological activity of the compound.

TABLE 2 Exemplary substitutions Original Preferred residue Exemplary substitutions substitutions Cys (C) Ser Ser Gln (Q) Asn Asn Glu (E) Asp Asp Gly (G) Pro, Ala Ala His (H) Asn, Gln, Lys, Arg Arg Ile (I) Leu, Val, Met, Ala, Phe, Norleucine Leu Leu (L) Norleucine, Ile, Val, Met, Ala, Phe Ile Lys (K) Arg, Gln, Asn Arg Met (M) Leu, Phe, Ile Leu Phe (F) Leu, Val, Ile, Ala, Tyr Leu Pro (P) Ala Ala Ser (S) Thr Thr Thr (T) Ser Ser Trp (W) Tyr, Phe Tyr Tyr (Y) Trp, Phe, Thr, Ser Phe Val (V) Ile, Leu, Met, Phe, Ala, Norleucine Leu

The polypeptides of the invention can be either synthesized in vitro or expressed recombinantly from the polynucleotide sequences. Because of redundancy in the genetic code, the sequences need not be identical to practice the invention. Polynucleotide and polypeptide sequence identities can be from 70%-100%, such as 70%, 75%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99% and of course, 100%.

The polypeptides of the invention can be readily synthesized in vitro using polypeptide chemistry. For example, polypeptide synthesis can be carried out in a stepwise manner on a solid phase support using an automated polypeptide synthesizer, such as a Rainin Symphony Peptide Synthesizer, Advanced Chemtech Peptide Synthesizer, Argonaut Parallel Synthesis System, or an Applied Biosystems Peptide Synthesizer. The peptide synthesizer instrument combines the Fmoc chemistry with HOBt/HBTU/DIEA activation to perform solid-phase peptide synthesis.

The side chains of many amino acids contain chemically reactive groups, such as amines, alcohols, or thiols. These side chains must be additionally protected to prevent undesired side-reactions during the coupling step. Side chain protecting groups that are base-stable, more preferably, both base-stabile and acid-labile are most useful.

“Percent (%) nucleic acid sequence identity” with respect to nucleic acid sequences is defined as the percentage of nucleotides in a candidate sequence that are identical with the nucleotides in the sequence of interest, after aligning the sequences and introducing gaps, if necessary, to achieve the maximum percent sequence identity. Alignment for purposes of determining % nucleic acid sequence identity can be achieved in various ways that are within the skill in the art, for instance, using publicly available computer software such as BLAST, BLAST-2, ALIGN or Megalign (DNASTAR) software. Those skilled in the art can determine appropriate parameters for measuring alignment, including any algorithms needed to achieve maximal alignment over the full length of the sequences being compared.

“Consisting essentially of a polynucleotide having a % sequence identity” means that the polynucleotide does not substantially differ in length, but may differ substantially in sequence. Thus, a polynucleotide “A” consisting essentially of a polynucleotide having at least 80% sequence identity to a known sequence “B” of 100 nucleotides means that polynucleotide “A” is about 100 nts long, but up to 20 nts can vary from the “B” sequence. The polynucleotide sequence in question can be longer or shorter due to modification of the termini, such as, for example, the addition of 1-15 nucleotides to produce specific types of probes, primers and other molecular tools, etc., such as the case of when substantially non-identical sequences are added to create intended secondary structures. Such non-identical nucleotides are not considered in the calculation of sequence identity when the sequence is modified by “consisting essentially of.”

Vaccine Compositions

The present invention is further directed to an immunogenic composition, e.g., a vaccine composition capable of blocking P. falciparum infection, for example a peptide vaccine or a DNA vaccine capable of blocking Schizont rupture at blood stage infection. The vaccine composition comprises one or more of the polypeptides, the nucleic acid sequences, or antigens thereof, as described herein.

A person skilled in the art will be able to select preferred peptides, polypeptides, nucleic acid sequences or combination of therof by testing, e.g., the blocking of the Schizont rupture or parasite egress from RBCs in vitro. Peptide(s) with the desired activity are then combined as a vaccine. A suitable vaccine will preferably contain between 1 and 20 peptides, more preferably 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, or 20 different peptides, further preferred 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 11, 12, 13, or 14 different peptides, and most preferably 12, 13 or 14 different peptides. Alternatively, a suitable vaccine will preferably contain between 1 and 20 nucleic acid sequences, more preferably 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, or 20 different nucleic acid sequences, further preferred 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 11, 12, 13, or 14 different nucleic acid sequences, and most preferably 12, 13 or 14 different nucleic acid sequences.

Such a vaccine is used for active immunization of a mammal, for example, a human who risks being exposed to one or more Plasmodium antigens (for example, due to travel within a region in which malaria is prevalent). For example, the vaccine can contain at least one antigen selected from the group consisting of: 1) a P. falciparum antigen comprising a polypeptide having at least 70% sequence identity with an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 28, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and/or 76, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3; 2) a P. falciparum antigen comprising a polypeptide having at least 70% to 99%, such as 80%, 85%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% and 99% sequence identity to an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 28, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and/or 76, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3, or fragment thereof; 3) a P. falciparum antigen comprising a polypeptide consisting essentially of the amino acid sequences of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 28, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and/or 76, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3; 4) a P. falciparum antigen consisting of the amino acid sequences of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 28, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and/or 76, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3; 5) a nucleic acid sequence having at least 70% sequence identity with a nucleic acid sequence encoding any one of the peptides listed above, preferably SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 4; 6) a nucleic acid sequence having at least 70% to 99%, such as 80%, 85%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% and 99% sequence identity to a nucleic acid sequence encoding the listed polypeptides, preferably SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 4; 7) a nucleic acid sequence consisting essentially of the nucleic acid sequence sequences described above. and 8) a nucleic acid sequence described above, preferably SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 4. A fragment of these polypeptides can be approximately 8-56 amino acid residues, such as 8, 9, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, and 56 residues. A fragment of these nucleic acid sequences can be approximately 10-300 nucleotides, such as 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 110, 120, 130, 140, 150, 160, 170, 180, 190, 200, 210, 220, 230, 240, 250, 260, 270, 280, 290, or 300 nucleotides.

Alternatively, if passive immunization is desired, one can administer one or more antibodies to the following antigens (as a vaccination): 1) a polypeptide having at least 70% sequence identity with an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47 preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3; 2) a polypeptide having at least 70% to 99%, such as 80%, 85%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% and 99% sequence identity to an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, and amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3, or fragment thereof; 3) a polypeptide consisting essentially of the amino acid sequences of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3; and 4) an amino acid sequences of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3. A fragment of these polypeptides can be approximately 8-56 amino acid residues, such as 8, 9, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, and 56 residues.

The vaccine composition can further comprise an adjuvant and/or a carrier. Examples of useful adjuvants and carriers are given herein below. The peptides and/or polypeptides in the composition can be associated with a carrier such as e.g. a protein or an antigen-presenting cell such as e.g. a dendritic cell (DC) capable of presenting the peptide to a T-cell.

Adjuvants are any substance whose admixture into the vaccine composition increases or otherwise modifies the immune response to the mutant peptide. Carriers are scaffold structures, for example a polypeptide or a polysaccharide, to which the neoantigenic peptides, is capable of being associated. Optionally, adjuvants are conjugated covalently or non-covalently to the peptides or polypeptides of the invention.

The ability of an adjuvant to increase the immune response to an antigen is typically manifested by a significant increase in immune-mediated reaction, or reduction in disease symptoms. For example, an increase in humoral immunity is typically manifested by a significant increase in the titer of antibodies raised to the antigen, and an increase in T-cell activity is typically manifested in increased cell proliferation, or cellular cytotoxicity, or cytokine secretion. An adjuvant may also alter an immune response, for example, by changing a primarily humoral or Th response into a primarily cellular, or Th response.

Suitable adjuvants include, but are not limited to aluminium salts, Montanide ISA 206, Montanide ISA 50V, Montanide ISA 50, Montanide ISA-51, Montanide ISA-720, 1018 ISS, Amplivax, AS15, BCG, CP-870,893, CpG7909, CyaA, dSLIM, GM-CSF, IC30, IC31, Imiquimod, ImuFact IMP321, IS Patch, ISS, ISCOMATRIX, JuvImmune, LipoVac, MF59, monophosphoryl lipid A, Montanide IMS 1312, OK-432, OM-174, OM-197-MP-EC, ONTAK, PepTel® vector system, PLG microparticles, resiquimod, SRL172, Virosomes and other Virus-like particles, YF-17D, VEGF trap, R848, beta-glucan, Pam3Cys, Aquila's QS21 stimulon (Aquila Biotech, Worcester, Mass., USA) which is derived from saponin, mycobacterial extracts and synthetic bacterial cell wall mimics, and other proprietary adjuvants such as Ribi's Detox. Quil or Superfos. Adjuvants such as incomplete Freund's or GM-CSF are preferred. Several immunological adjuvants (e.g., MF59) specific for dendritic cells and their preparation have been described previously (Dupuis M, et al., Cell Immunol. 1998; 186(1):18-27; Allison A C; Dev Biol Stand. 1998; 92:3-11). Also cytokines may be used. Several cytokines have been directly linked to influencing dendritic cell migration to lymphoid tissues (e.g., TNF-alpha), accelerating the maturation of dendritic cells into efficient antigen-presenting cells for T-lymphocytes (e.g., GM-CSF, IL-1 and IL-4) (U.S. Pat. No. 5,849,589, specifically incorporated herein by reference in its entirety) and acting as immunoadjuvants (e.g., IL-12) (Gabrilovich D I, et al., J Immunother Emphasis Tumor Immunol. 1996 (6):414-418).

Other examples of useful immunostimulatory agents include, but are not limited to, Toll-like Receptor (TLR) agonists such as chemically modified CpGs (e.g. CpR, Idera), Poly(I:C)(e.g. polyi:CI2U), non-CpG bacterial DNA or RNA as well as immunoactive small molecules, such as cyclophosphamide, which may act therapeutically and/or as an adjuvant. The amounts and concentrations of adjuvants and additives useful in the context of the present invention can readily be determined by the skilled artisan without undue experimentation. Additional adjuvants include colony-stimulating factors, such as Granulocyte Macrophage Colony Stimulating Factor (GM-CSF, sargramostim). The vaccine may also contain a blocker of PD-L1 (CD274) binding to its receptor (PD-1) or to CD80 to prevent/inhibit the development of T regulatory cells (Treg) and thereby reducing the development of tolerance to the vaccine antigen. And exemplary PD-1 inhibitor is Bristol Meyers Squibb's BMS-936558 (also known as MDX-1106 and ONO-4538).

A vaccine composition according to the present invention may comprise more than one different adjuvants. Furthermore, the invention encompasses a therapeutic composition comprising any adjuvant substance including any of the above or combinations thereof. It is also contemplated that the peptide or polypeptide, and the adjuvant can be administered separately in any appropriate sequence.

A carrier may be present independently of an adjuvant. The function of a carrier can for example be to increase the molecular weight of in particular mutant in order to increase their activity or immunogenicity, to confer stability, to increase the biological activity, or to increase serum half-life. Furthermore, a carrier may aid presenting peptides to T-cells. The carrier may be any suitable carrier known to the person skilled in the art, for example a protein or an antigen presenting cell. A carrier protein could be but is not limited to keyhole limpet hemocyanin, serum proteins such as transferrin, bovine serum albumin, human serum albumin, thyroglobulin or ovalbumin, immunoglobulins, or hormones, such as insulin or palmitic acid. For immunization of humans, the carrier must be a physiologically acceptable carrier acceptable to humans and safe. However, tetanus toxoid and/or diptheria toxoid are suitable carriers in one embodiment of the invention. Alternatively, the carrier may be dextrans for example sepharose.

Cytotoxic T-cells (CTLs) recognize an antigen in the form of a peptide bound to an MHC molecule rather than the intact foreign antigen itself. The MHC molecule itself is located at the cell surface of an antigen presenting cell. Thus, an activation of CTLs is only possible if a trimeric complex of peptide antigen, MHC molecule, and APC is present. Correspondingly, it may enhance the immune response if not only the peptide is used for activation of CTLs, but if additionally APCs with the respective MHC molecule are added. Therefore, in some embodiments the vaccine composition according to the present invention additionally contains at least one antigen presenting cell.

In the case of a DNA vaccine, a nucleic acid comprising the sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 1, 4, 5, 8, 9, 12, 13, 16, 17, 20, 21, 24, 25, 28, 29, 32, 33, 36, 37, 40, 41, 44, 45, or 48, preferably SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 4 formulated in a eukaryotic vector for use as a vaccine that is administered to human subjects. The nucleotides encoding the antigen are operably linked promoter and other regulatory sequences in the vector. Such eukaryotic, e.g., mammalian vectors, are known in the art [e.g., pcDNA™ (Invitrogen) and vectors available from Vical Inc. (San Diego, Calif.)]. Other exemplary vectors, e.g., pNGVL4a, and derivatives thereof, are described in Moorty et al., 2003, Vaccine 21:1995-2002; Cebere et al., 2006, Vaccine 24:41-425; or Trimble et al., 2009, Clin. Cancer Res. 15:364-367; hereby incorporated by reference).

Recombinant Expression Vectors and Host Cells

The antigen of the present invention can be made by any recombinant method that provides the epitope of interest. Accordingly, another aspect of the invention pertains to vectors, preferably expression vectors, containing a nucleic acid encoding any clones of Table 1, such as a PF10_0212a or clone 2 protein, or derivatives, fragments, analogs or homologs thereof. As used herein, the term “vector” refers to a nucleic acid molecule capable of transporting another nucleic acid to which it has been linked. One type of vector is a “plasmid”, which refers to a linear or circular double stranded DNA loop into which additional DNA segments can be ligated. Another type of vector is a viral vector, wherein additional DNA segments can be ligated into the viral genome. Certain vectors are capable of autonomous replication in a host cell into which they are introduced (e.g., bacterial vectors having a bacterial origin of replication and episomal mammalian vectors). Other vectors (e.g., non episomal mammalian vectors) are integrated into the genome of a host cell upon introduction into the host cell, and thereby are replicated along with the host genome. Moreover, certain vectors are capable of directing the expression of genes to which they are operatively linked. Such vectors are referred to herein as “expression vectors”. In general, expression vectors of utility in recombinant DNA techniques are often in the form of plasmids. In the present specification, “plasmid” and “vector” can be used interchangeably as the plasmid is the most commonly used form of vector. However, the invention is intended to include such other forms of expression vectors, such as viral vectors (e.g., replication defective retroviruses, adenoviruses and adeno-associated viruses), which serve equivalent functions. Additionally, some viral vectors are capable of targeting a particular cells type either specifically or non-specifically.

The recombinant expression vectors of the invention comprise a nucleic acid of the invention in a form suitable for expression of the nucleic acid in a host cell, which means that the recombinant expression vectors include one or more regulatory sequences, selected on the basis of the host cells to be used for expression, that is operatively linked to the nucleic acid sequence to be expressed. Within a recombinant expression vector, “operably linked” is intended to mean that the nucleotide sequence of interest is linked to the regulatory sequence(s) in a manner that allows for expression of the nucleotide sequence (e.g., in an in vitro transcription/translation system or in a host cell when the vector is introduced into the host cell). The term “regulatory sequence” is intended to include promoters, enhancers and other expression control elements (e.g., polyadenylation signals). Such regulatory sequences are described, for example, in Goeddel; GENE EXPRESSION TECHNOLOGY: METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY 185, Academic Press, San Diego, Calif (1990). Regulatory sequences include those that direct constitutive expression of a nucleotide sequence in many types of host cell and those that direct expression of the nucleotide sequence only in certain host cells (e.g., tissue specific regulatory sequences). It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the design of the expression vector can depend on such factors as the choice of the host cell to be transformed, the level of expression of protein desired, etc. The expression vectors of the invention can be introduced into host cells to thereby produce proteins or peptides, including fusion proteins or peptides, encoded by nucleic acids as described herein (e.g., PF10_0212a or clone 2 proteins, mutant forms of PF10_0212a or clone 2 (e.g., PfSEP-1A, SEQ ID NO:2), fusion proteins, etc.).

The recombinant expression vectors of the invention can be designed for expression of any of the polypeptides or polynucleotide sequences of the present invention in prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells. For example, any of the polypeptides or polynucleotide sequences of the present invention can be expressed in bacterial cells such as E. coli, insect cells (using baculovirus expression vectors) yeast cells or mammalian cells. Suitable host cells are discussed further in Goeddel, GENE EXPRESSION TECHNOLOGY: METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY 185, Academic Press, San Diego, Calif. (1990). Alternatively, the recombinant expression vector can be transcribed and translated in vitro, for example using T7 promoter regulatory sequences and T7 polymerase.

Expression of proteins in prokaryotes is most often carried out in E. coli with vectors containing constitutive or inducible promoters directing the expression of either fusion or non fusion proteins. Fusion vectors add a number of amino acids to a protein encoded therein, usually to the amino terminus of the recombinant protein. Such fusion vectors typically serve three purposes: (1) to increase expression of recombinant protein; (2) to increase the solubility of the recombinant protein; and (3) to aid in the purification of the recombinant protein by acting as a ligand in affinity purification. Often, in fusion expression vectors, a proteolytic cleavage site is introduced at the junction of the fusion moiety and the recombinant protein to enable separation of the recombinant protein from the fusion moiety subsequent to purification of the fusion protein. Such enzymes, and their cognate recognition sequences, include Factor Xa, thrombin and enterokinase. Typical fusion expression vectors include pGEX (Pharmacia Biotech Inc; Smith and Johnson (1988) Gene 67:31 40), pMAL (New England Biolabs, Beverly, Mass.) and pRIT5 (Pharmacia, Piscataway, N.J.) that fuse glutathione S transferase (GST), maltose E binding protein, or protein A, respectively, to the target recombinant protein. Examples of suitable inducible non fusion E. coli expression vectors include pTrc (Amrann et al., (1988) Gene 69:301 315) and pET 11d (Studier et al., GENE EXPRESSION TECHNOLOGY: METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY 185, Academic Press, San Diego, Calif (1990) 60 89).

One strategy to maximize recombinant protein expression in E. coli is to express the protein in a host bacteria with an impaired capacity to proteolytically cleave the recombinant protein. See, Gottesman, GENE EXPRESSION TECHNOLOGY: METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY 185, Academic Press, San Diego, Calif. (1990) 119 128. Another strategy is to alter the nucleic acid sequence of the nucleic acid to be inserted into an expression vector so that the individual codons for each amino acid are those preferentially utilized in E. coli (Wada et al., (1992) Nucleic Acids Res. 20:2111 2118). Such alteration of nucleic acid sequences of the invention can be carried out by standard DNA synthesis techniques.

In another embodiment, the expression vector is a yeast expression vector. Examples of vectors for expression in yeast S. cerevisiae include pYepSecl (Baldari, et al., (1987) EMBO J 6:229 234), pMFa (Kurjan and Herskowitz, (1982) Cell 30:933 943), pJRY88 (Schultz et al., (1987) Gene 54:113 123), pYES2 (Invitrogen Corporation, San Diego, Calif), and picZ (InVitrogen Corp, San Diego, Calif.).

Alternatively, any of the polypeptides or polynucleotide sequences of the present invention can be expressed in insect cells using baculovirus expression vectors. Baculovirus vectors available for expression of proteins in cultured insect cells (e.g., SF9 cells) include the pAc series (Smith et al. (1983) Mol Cell Biol 3:2156 2165) and the pVL series (Lucklow and Summers (1989) Virology 170:31 39).

In yet another embodiment, a nucleic acid of the invention is expressed in mammalian cells using a mammalian expression vector. Examples of mammalian expression vectors include pCDM8 (Seed (1987) Nature 329:840) and pMT2PC (Kaufman et al. (1987) EMBO J 6: 187 195). When used in mammalian cells, the expression vector's control functions are often provided by viral regulatory elements. For example, commonly used promoters are derived from polyoma, Adenovirus 2, cytomegalovirus and Simian Virus 40. For other suitable expression systems for both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. See, e.g., Chapters 16 and 17 of Sambrook et al., MOLECULAR CLONING: A LABORATORY MANUAL. 2nd ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., 1989.

In another embodiment, the recombinant mammalian expression vector is capable of directing expression of the nucleic acid preferentially in a particular cell type (e.g., tissue specific regulatory elements are used to express the nucleic acid). Tissue specific regulatory elements are known in the art. Non limiting examples of suitable tissue specific promoters include the albumin promoter (liver specific; Pinkert et al. (1987) Genes Dev 1:268 277), lymphoid specific promoters (Calame and Eaton (1988) Adv Immunol 43:235 275), in particular promoters of T cell receptors (Winoto and Baltimore (1989) EMBO J 8:729 733) and immunoglobulins (Banerji et al. (1983) Cell 33:729 740; Queen and Baltimore (1983) Cell 33:741 748), neuron specific promoters (e.g., the neurofilament promoter; Byrne and Ruddle (1989) PNAS 86:5473 5477), pancreas specific promoters (Edlund et al. (1985) Science 230:912 916), and mammary gland specific promoters (e.g., milk whey promoter; U.S. Pat. No. 4,873,316 and European Application Publication No. 264,166). Developmentally regulated promoters are also encompassed, e.g., the murine hox promoters (Kessel and Gruss (1990) Science 249:374 379) and the α-fetoprotein promoter (Campes and Tilghman (1989) Genes Dev 3:537 546).

The invention further provides a recombinant expression vector comprising a DNA molecule of the invention cloned into the expression vector in an antisense orientation. That is, the DNA molecule is operatively linked to a regulatory sequence in a manner that allows for expression (by transcription of the DNA molecule) of an RNA molecule that is antisense to mRNA of any of the polynucleotide sequences of the present invention. Regulatory sequences operatively linked to a nucleic acid cloned in the antisense orientation can be chosen that direct the continuous expression of the antisense RNA molecule in a variety of cell types, for instance viral promoters and/or enhancers, or regulatory sequences can be chosen that direct constitutive, tissue specific or cell type specific expression of antisense RNA. The antisense expression vector can be in the form of a recombinant plasmid, phagemid or attenuated virus in which antisense nucleic acids are produced under the control of a high efficiency regulatory region, the activity of which can be determined by the cell type into which the vector is introduced. For a discussion of the regulation of gene expression using antisense genes see Weintraub et al., “Antisense RNA as a molecular tool for genetic analysis,” Reviews Trends in Genetics, Vol. 1(1) 1986.

Another aspect of the invention pertains to host cells into which a recombinant expression vector of the invention has been introduced. The terms “host cell” and “recombinant host cell” are used interchangeably herein. It is understood that such terms refer not only to the particular subject cell but also to the progeny or potential progeny of such a cell. Because certain modifications may occur in succeeding generations due to either mutation or environmental influences, such progeny may not, in fact, be identical to the parent cell, but are still included within the scope of the term as used herein.

A host cell can be any prokaryotic or eukaryotic cell. For example, any of the polypeptides or polynucleotide sequences of the present invention can be expressed in bacterial cells such as E. coli, insect cells, yeast or mammalian cells (such as Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO) or COS cells). Alternatively, a host cell can be a premature mammalian cell, i.e., pluripotent stem cell. A host cell can also be derived from other human tissue. Other suitable host cells are known to those skilled in the art.

Vector DNA can be introduced into prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells via conventional transformation, transduction, infection or transfection techniques. As used herein, the terms “transformation” “transduction”, “infection” and “transfection” are intended to refer to a variety of art recognized techniques for introducing foreign nucleic acid (e.g., DNA) into a host cell, including calcium phosphate or calcium chloride co precipitation, DEAE dextran mediated transfection, lipofection, or electroporation. In addition transfection can be mediated by a transfection agent. By “transfection agent” is meant to include any compound that mediates incorporation of DNA in the host cell, e.g., liposome. Suitable methods for transforming or transfecting host cells can be found in Sambrook, et al. (MOLECULAR CLONING: A LABORATORY MANUAL. 2nd ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., 1989), and other laboratory manuals. Transfection may be “stable” (i.e. integration of the foreign DNA into the host genome) or “transient” (i.e., DNA is episomally expressed in the host cells).

For stable transfection of mammalian cells, it is known that, depending upon the expression vector and transfection technique used, only a small fraction of cells may integrate the foreign DNA into their genome the remainder of the DNA remains episomal. In order to identify and select these integrants, a gene that encodes a selectable marker (e.g., resistance to antibiotics) is generally introduced into the host cells along with the gene of interest. Various selectable markers include those that confer resistance to drugs, such as G418, hygromycin and methotrexate. Nucleic acid encoding a selectable marker can be introduced into a host cell on the same vector as that encoding any of the polypeptides or polynucleotide sequences of the present invention can be introduced on a separate vector. Cells stably transfected with the introduced nucleic acid can be identified by drug selection (e.g., cells that have incorporated the selectable marker gene will survive, while the other cells die). In a specific embodiment, the promoter is the insulin promoter driving the expression of green fluorescent protein (GFP).

In one embodiment nucleic acid of any of the polypeptides or polynucleotide sequences of the present invention is present in a viral vector. In another embodiment the nucleic acid is encapsulated in a virus. In some embodiments the virus preferably infects pluripotent cells of various tissue types, e.g. hematopoietic stem, cells, neuronal stem cells, hepatic stem cells or embryonic stem cells, preferably the virus is hepatropic. By “hepatotropic” it is meant that the virus has the capacity to preferably target the cells of the liver either specifically or non-specifically. In further embodiments the virus is a modulated hepatitis virus, SV-40, or Epstein-Bar virus. In yet another embodiment, the virus is an adenovirus.

“Recombinant” refers to an artificial combination of two otherwise separated segments of sequence, e.g., by chemical synthesis or by the manipulation of isolated segments of nucleic acids by genetic engineering techniques.

A transgenic mammal can also be used in order to express the protein of interest encoded by one or both of the above-described nucleic acid sequences. More specifically, once the above-described construct is created, it can be inserted into the pronucleus of an embryo. The embryo can then be implanted into a recipient female. Alternatively, a nuclear transfer method could also be utilized (Schnieke et al., 1997). Gestation and birth are then permitted to occur (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,750,176 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,700,671), and milk, tissue or other fluid samples from the offspring should then contain the protein of interest. The mammal utilized as the host can be selected from the group consisting of, for example, a mouse, a rat, a rabbit, a pig, a goat, a sheep, a horse and a cow. However, any mammal can be used provided it has the ability to incorporate DNA encoding the protein of interest into its genome.

Therapeutic Methods

The invention further provides a method of inducing a P. falciparum specific immune response in a subject, vaccinating against malaria, treating and or alleviating a symptom of malaria in a subject by administering the subject a peptide or vaccine composition of the invention.

The subject has been diagnosed with malaria or is at risk of developing malaria. The subject has resistant malaria. The subject is a human, dog, cat, horse or any animal in which a P. falciparum specific immune response is desired. Preferably, the subject is a child under 5 years old of age. More preferably, the subject is at least about 6-8 weeks old of age.

The peptide or composition of the invention is administered in an amount sufficient to induce an immune response.

The invention provides methods of treating or prevention malaria by administering to a subject one or more peptides of the instant invention. The antigen peptide, polypeptide, nucleic acid sequences or vaccine composition of the invention can be administered alone or in combination with one or more therapeutic agents. The therapeutic agent is, for example, one, two, three, four, or more additional vaccines, an antimalarials artemisinin-combination therapy, or an immunotherapy. Any suitable therapeutic treatment for malaria may be administered. The additional vaccine may comprise an inhibitor of parasite liver invasion or an inhibitor of parasite RBC invasion. Such additional vaccines include, but are not limited to, anti-RBC invasion vaccines (MSP-1), RTS,S (Mosquirix), NYVAC-Pf7, CSP, and [NANP]19-5.1. The antigen peptide, polypeptide, nucleic acid sequences, or vaccine composition of the invention can be administered prior to, concurrently, or after other therapeutic agents.

The optimum amount of each peptide to be included in the vaccine composition and the optimum dosing regimen can be determined by one skilled in the art without undue experimentation. For example, the peptide or its variant may be prepared for intravenous (i.v.) injection, sub-cutaneous (s.c.) injection, intradermal (i.d.) injection, intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection, intramuscular (i.m.) injection. Preferred methods of peptide injection include s.c., i.d., i.p., i.m., and i.v. Preferred methods of DNA injection include i.d., i.m., s.c., i.p. and i.v. For example, doses of between 1 and 500 mg 50 μg and 1.5 mg, preferably 125 μg to 500 μg, of peptide or DNA may be given and will depend from the respective peptide or DNA. Doses of this range were successfully used in previous trials (Brunsvig P F, et al., Cancer Immunol Immunother. 2006; 55(12):1553-1564; M. Staehler, et al., ASCO meeting 2007; Abstract No 3017). Other methods of administration of the vaccine composition are known to those skilled in the art.

Pharmaceutical compositions comprising the peptide of the invention may be administered to an individual already suffering from malaria. In therapeutic applications, compositions are administered to a patient in an amount sufficient to elicit an effective immune response to the present antigen and to cure or at least partially arrest symptoms and/or complications. An amount adequate to accomplish this is defined as “therapeutically effective dose.” Amounts effective for this use will depend on, e.g., the peptide composition, the manner of administration, the stage and severity of the disease being treated, the weight and general state of health of the patient, and the judgment of the prescribing physician, but generally range for the initial immunization (that is for therapeutic or prophylactic administration) from about 1.0 μg to about 50,000 μg of peptide for a 70 kg patient, followed by boosting dosages or from about 1.0 to about 10,000 μg of peptide pursuant to a boosting regimen over weeks to months depending upon the patient's response and condition by measuring specific immune activity in the patient's blood.

The pharmaceutical compositions (e.g., vaccine compositions) for therapeutic treatment are intended for parenteral, topical, nasal, oral or local administration. Preferably, the pharmaceutical compositions are administered parenterally, e.g., intravenously, subcutaneously, intradermally, or intramuscularly. Preferably, the vaccine is administered intramuscularly. The invention provides compositions for parenteral administration which comprise a solution of the peptides and vaccine compositions are dissolved or suspended in an acceptable carrier, preferably an aqueous carrier. A variety of aqueous carriers may be used, e.g., water, buffered water, 0.9% saline, 0.3% glycine, hyaluronic acid and the like. These compositions may be sterilized by conventional, well known sterilization techniques, or may be sterile filtered. The resulting aqueous solutions may be packaged for use as is, or lyophilized, the lyophilized preparation being combined with a sterile solution prior to administration. The compositions may contain pharmaceutically acceptable auxiliary substances as required to approximate physiological conditions, such as pH adjusting and buffering agents, tonicity adjusting agents, wetting agents and the like, for example, sodium acetate, sodium lactate, sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium chloride, sorbitan monolaurate, triethanolamine oleate, etc.

The concentration of peptides of the invention in the pharmaceutical formulations can vary widely, i.e., from less than about 0.1%, usually at or at least about 2% to as much as 20% to 50% or more by weight, and will be selected primarily by fluid volumes, viscosities, etc., in accordance with the particular mode of administration selected.

The peptide of the invention may also be administered via liposomes, which target the peptides to a particular cells tissue, such as lymphoid tissue. Liposomes are also useful in increasing the half-life of the peptides. Liposomes include emulsions, foams, micelles, insoluble monolayers, liquid crystals, phospholipid dispersions, lamellar layers and the like. In these preparations the peptide to be delivered is incorporated as part of a liposome, alone or in conjunction with a molecule which binds to, e.g., a receptor prevalent among lymphoid cells, such as monoclonal antibodies which bind to the CD45 antigen, or with other therapeutic or immunogenic compositions. Thus, liposomes filled with a desired peptide of the invention can be directed to the site of lymphoid cells, where the liposomes then deliver the selected therapeutic/immunogenic peptide compositions. Liposomes for use in the invention are formed from standard vesicle-forming lipids, which generally include neutral and negatively charged phospholipids and a sterol, such as cholesterol. The selection of lipids is generally guided by consideration of, e.g., liposome size, acid lability and stability of the liposomes in the blood stream. A variety of methods are available for preparing liposomes, as described in, e.g., Szoka et al., Ann. Rev. Biophys. Bioeng. 9; 467 (1980), USA U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,235,871, 4,501,728USA U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,501,728, 4,837,028, and 5,019,369.

For targeting to the immune cells, a ligand to be incorporated into the liposome can include, e.g., antibodies or fragments thereof specific for cell surface determinants of the desired immune system cells. A liposome suspension containing a peptide may be administered intravenously, locally, topically, etc. in a dose which varies according to, inter alia, the manner of administration, the peptide being delivered, and the stage of the disease being treated.

For solid compositions, conventional or nanoparticle nontoxic solid carriers may be used which include, for example, pharmaceutical grades of mannitol, lactose, starch, magnesium stearate, sodium saccharin, talcum, cellulose, glucose, sucrose, magnesium carbonate, and the like. For oral administration, a pharmaceutically acceptable nontoxic composition is formed by incorporating any of the normally employed excipients, such as those carriers previously listed, and generally 10-95% of active ingredient, that is, one or more peptides of the invention, and more preferably at a concentration of 25%-75%.

For aerosol administration, the immunogenic peptides are preferably supplied in finely divided form along with a surfactant and propellant. Typical percentages of peptides are 0.01%-20% by weight, preferably 1%-10%. The surfactant must, of course, be nontoxic, and preferably soluble in the propellant. Representative of such agents are the esters or partial esters of fatty acids containing from 6 to 22 carbon atoms, such as caproic, octanoic, lauric, palmitic, stearic, linoleic, linolenic, olesteric and oleic acids with an aliphatic polyhydric alcohol or its cyclic anhydride. Mixed esters, such as mixed or natural glycerides may be employed. The surfactant may constitute 0.1%-20% by weight of the composition, preferably 0.25-5%. The balance of the composition is ordinarily propellant. A carrier can also be included as desired, as with, e.g., lecithin for intranasal delivery.

For therapeutic or immunization purposes, nucleic acids encoding the peptide of the invention and optionally one or more of the peptides described herein can also be administered to the patient. A number of methods are conveniently used to deliver the nucleic acids to the patient. For instance, the nucleic acid can be delivered directly, as “naked DNA”. This approach is described, for instance, in Wolff et al., Science 247: 1465-1468 (1990) as well as USA U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,580,859 and 5,589,466. The nucleic acids can also be administered using ballistic delivery as described, for instance, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,204,253. Particles comprised solely of DNA can be administered. Alternatively, DNA can be adhered to particles, such as gold particles.

The nucleic acids can also be delivered complexed to cationic compounds, such as cationic lipids. Lipid-mediated gene delivery methods are described, for instance, in 9618372WOAWO 96/18372; 9324640WOAWO 93/24640; Mannino & Gould-Fogerite , BioTechniques 6(7): 682-691 (1988); 5,279,833USA Rose U.S. Pat. No. 5,279,833; 9106309WOAWO 91/06309; and Felgner et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84: 7413-7414 (1987).

The peptides and polypeptides of the invention can also be expressed by attenuated viral hosts, such as vaccinia or fowlpox. This approach involves the use of vaccinia virus as a vector to express nucleotide sequences that encode the peptide of the invention. Upon introduction into an acutely or chronically infected host or into a noninfected host, the recombinant vaccinia virus expresses the immunogenic peptide, and thereby elicits a host CTL response. Vaccinia vectors and methods useful in immunization protocols are described in, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,722,848. Another vector is BCG (Bacille Calmette Guerin). BCG vectors are described in Stover et al. (Nature 351:456-460 (1991)). A wide variety of other vectors useful for therapeutic administration or immunization of the peptides of the invention, e.g., Salmonella typhi vectors and the like, will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the description herein.

A preferred means of administering nucleic acids encoding the peptide of the invention uses minigene constructs encoding multiple epitopes. To create a DNA sequence encoding the selected CTL epitopes (minigene) for expression in human cells, the amino acid sequences of the epitopes are reverse translated. A human codon usage table is used to guide the codon choice for each amino acid. These epitope-encoding DNA sequences are directly adjoined, creating a continuous polypeptide sequence. To optimize expression and/or immunogenicity, additional elements can be incorporated into the minigene design. Examples of amino acid sequence that could be reverse translated and included in the minigene sequence include: helper T lymphocyte, epitopes, a leader (signal) sequence, and an endoplasmic reticulum retention signal. In addition, WIC presentation of CTL epitopes may be improved by including synthetic (e.g. poly-alanine) or naturally-occurring flanking sequences adjacent to the CTL epitopes.

The dosing regimen that can be used in the methods of the invention includes, but is not limited to, daily, three times weekly (intermittent), two times weekly, weekly, or every 14 days. Alternatively, dosing regimen includes, but is not limited to, monthly dosing or dosing every 6-8 weeks. The vaccine of the present invention can be administered intramuscularly once every two weeks for 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or more times, alone or in combination with 1, 2, 3, 4, or more additional vaccines in a subject, preferably a human subject.

Antibodies

“Antibody” (Ab) comprises single Abs directed against a target antigen (an anti-target antigen Ab), anti-target antigen Ab compositions with poly-epitope specificity, single chain anti-target antigen Abs, and fragments of anti-target antigen Abs. A “monoclonal antibody” (mAb) is obtained from a population of substantially homogeneous Abs, i.e., the individual Abs comprising the population are identical except for possible naturally-occurring mutations that can be present in minor amounts. Exemplary Abs include polyclonal (pAb), monoclonal (mAb), humanized, bi-specific (bsAb), and heteroconjugate Abs. The invention encompasses not only an intact monoclonal antibody, but also an immunologically-active antibody fragment, e. g. , a Fab or (Fab)2 fragment; an engineered single chain Fv molecule; or a chimeric molecule, e.g., an antibody which contains the binding specificity of one antibody, e.g., of murine origin, and the remaining portions of another antibody, e.g., of human origin.

Also provided herein are antibodies to the following antigens (as a vaccination): 1) a polypeptide having at least 70% sequence identity with an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3; 2) a polypeptide having at least 70% to 99%, such as 80%, 85%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% and 99% sequence identity to an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3, or fragment thereof; 3) a polypeptide consisting essentially of the amino acid sequences of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 6, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3; and 4) an amino acid sequences of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3. A fragment of these polypeptides can be approximately 8-56 amino acid residues, such as 8, 9, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, and 56 residues.

Polyclonal Abs can be raised in a mammalian host by one or more injections of an immunogen and, if desired, an adjuvant. Monoclonal antibodies of the invention can be produced by any hybridoma liable to be formed according to classical methods from splenic or lymph node cells of an animal, particularly from a mouse or rat, immunized against the clone 2 polypeptides or peptides according to the invention.

The antigen and antibody of the present invention can be attached to a signal generating compound or “label”. This signal generating compound or label is in itself detectable or can be reacted with one or more additional compounds to generate a detectable product. Examples of such signal generating compounds include chromogens, radioisotopes (e.g., ¹²⁵I, ¹³¹I, ³²P, ³H, ³⁵S, and ¹⁴C), fluorescent compounds (e.g., fluorescein, rhodamine), chemiluminescent compounds, particles (visible or fluorescent), nucleic acids, complexing agents, or catalysts such as enzymes (e.g., alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, horseradish peroxidase, β-galactosidase, and ribonuclease). In the case of enzyme use, addition of chromo-, fluoro-, or lumo-genic substrate results in generation of a detectable signal. Other detection systems such as time-resolved fluorescence, internal-reflection fluorescence, amplification (e.g., polymerase chain reaction) and Raman spectroscopy are also useful.

Also provided herein is a method of treating P. falciparum malaria in a subject in need of by administering a therapeutically effective amount of an antibody described herewith to the subject. Preferably, the antibody is a purified monoclonal antibody, e.g., one that has been raised to and is specific for the protein of SEQ ID NO: 2. For example, the monoclonal antibody is a humanized antibody. The treatment can be initiated at an early stage after the appearance of recrudescent parasites. The symptoms of the subject may be mild or absent and parasitemia is low but increasing, for example from range 4,000-10,000/ul. Alternative, the subject may have fever <38.5° C. without any other accompanying symptom. The subject can be a child under 10 years of age. The subject can also be an elder child or an adult. In one example, the subject is characterized as suffering from acute P. falciparum malaria but has not responded to treatment with anti-malarial drugs. In this passive immunity approach, the purified humanized monoclonal antibody that binds specifically to the protein of clones of Table 1, preferably SEQ ID NO: 2 is administered to the subject to kill the infective agent and/or inhibit RBC invasion.

The antibody can be administered orally, parenterally, intraperitoneally, intravenously, intraarterially, transdermally, sublingually, intramuscularly, rectally, transbuccally, intranasally, liposomally, via inhalation, vaginally, intraoccularly, via local delivery by catheter or stent, subcutaneously, intraadiposally, intraarticularly, intrathecally, or in a slow release dosage form. Preferably, the antibody is administered intravenously or intramuscularly. For example, the antibody is administered in 1-2 gram amounts, 1, 2, 3, or 4 times. The dosing regimen that can be used in the methods of the invention includes, but is not limited to, daily, three times weekly (intermittent), two times weekly, weekly, or every 14 days. Alternatively, dosing regimen includes, but is not limited to, monthly dosing or dosing every 6-8 weeks. The antibody of the present invention can be administered intravenously once, twice or three times alone or in combination with 1, 2, 3, 4, or more additional therapeutic agents in a subject, preferably a human subject. The additional therapeutic agent is, for example, one, two, three, four, or more additional vaccines or antibodies, an antimalarials artemisinin-combination therapy, or an immunotherapy. Any suitable therapeutic treatment for malaria may be administered. The additional vaccine may comprise an inhibitor of parasite liver invasion or an inhibitor of parasite RBC invasion. Such additional vaccines include, but are not limited to, anti-RBC invasion vaccines (MSP-1), RTS,S (Mosquirix), NYVAC-Pf7, CSP, and [NANP]19-5.1. The antibody of the invention can be administered prior to, concurrently, or after other therapeutic agents.

Amounts effective for this use will depend on, e.g., the antibody composition, the manner of administration, the stage and severity of P. falciparum malaria being treated, the weight and general state of health of the patient, and the judgment of the prescribing physician, but generally range for the treatment from about 10 mg/kg (weight of a subject) to 300 mg/kg, preferably 20 mg/kg-200 mg/kg.

Kits

Kits are also included within the scope of the present invention. The present invention includes kits for determining the presence of antibodies to P. falciparum in a test sample. A kit can comprise: (a) a P. falciparum antigen comprising a polypeptide having at least 70% sequence identity with an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3; and (b) a conjugate comprising an antibody attached to a signal-generating compound capable of generating a detectable signal. The kit can also contain a control or calibrator which comprises a reagent which binds to the antigen. The P. falciparum antigen can comprise a polypeptide having at least 70% to 99%, such as 80%, 85%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% and 99% sequence identity to an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42,43, 46, or 47 preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, and amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3, or fragment thereof. A fragment of these polypeptides can be approximately 8-56 amino acid residues, such as 8, 9, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, and 56 residues. The antigen can comprise a polypeptide consisting essentially of the amino acid sequences of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3. Finally, the antigen can consist of the amino acid sequences of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, or 47, preferably SEQ ID NO:2, SEQ ID NO:3, or amino acid residues 811-1083 of SEQ ID NO:3.

The present invention also provides a pharmaceutical pack or kit comprising one or more containers filled with the vaccine in a form suitable for intramuscular administration or other routes of administration. The kits of the present invention may also contain one or more antibodies described herewith. Optionally the kit may contain disposable items, such as biodegradable items. The kit may also contain a sample collection means, including, but not limited to a needle for collecting blood, storage means for storing the collected sample, and for shipment. Alternatively, any kits of the present invention may contain an instruction for use to diagnose malaria or a receptacle for receiving subject derived bodily fluid or tissue.

The kit further comprises instructions for use or a CD, or CD-ROM with instructions on how to collect sample, ship sample, and means to interpret test results. The kit may also contain a control sample either positive or negative or a standard and/or an algorithmic device for assessing the results and additional reagents and components.

A “biological sample” is any bodily fluid or tissue sample obtained from a subject, including, but is not limited to, blood, blood serum, urine, and saliva.

The kit may further comprise one or more additional compounds to generate a detectable product. Examples of such signal generating compounds include chromogens, radioisotopes (e.g., ¹²⁵I, ¹³¹I, ³²P, ³H, ³⁵S, and ¹⁴C), fluorescent compounds (e.g., fluorescein, rhodamine), chemiluminescent compounds, particles (visible or fluorescent), nucleic acids, complexing agents, or catalysts such as enzymes (e.g., alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, horseradish peroxidase, β-galactosidase, and ribonuclease).

By way of example, and not of limitation, examples of the present invention shall now be given.

EXAMPLE 1 Antibodies to PfSEP-1Block Parasite Egress from RBCs and Protect Subjects from Severe Malaria

P. falciparum malaria is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in developing countries, infecting hundreds of millions of individuals and killing over one million children in sub-Saharan Africa each year. Recent estimates indicate that even these staggering figures significantly underestimate the actual disease burden. Children suffer the greatest morbidity and mortality from malaria—yet this age group has not been targeted at the identification stage of vaccine development. Of the about 100 vaccine candidates currently under investigation, more than 60% are based on only four parasite antigens. New antigen candidates are urgently needed, but strategies to identify novel antigens are limited and many focus on rodent malarias.

Human residents of endemic areas develop protective immunity that limits parasitemia and disease, and naturally acquired human immunity provides an attractive model for vaccine antigen identification. Plasma from some chronically exposed individuals contains antibodies which limit parasite growth ex vivo and following adoptive transfer, a finding which confirms the protective efficacy of anti-parasite antibodies. One approach to identify and characterize new malarial vaccine candidate antigens is to identify malarial proteins that are uniquely recognized by antibodies in the plasma of chronically exposed, yet resistant individuals. Because of logistic difficulties in characterizing naturally acquired resistance in endemic populations, this approach has not been widely exploited.

Studies were carried out to identify vaccine candidates for pediatric falciparum malaria by identifying the parasite targets of naturally acquired protective human antibodies. A differential, whole proteome screening method using plasma and epidemiologic data from a birth cohort of children living in Tanzania was used to identify P. falciparum antigens associated with resistance in two-year old children. Schizont Egress Protein-1 (PfSEP-1), a 244-kDa parasite antigen, which localizes to the schizont/parasitophorous vacuole membrane, Maurer's clefts and the inner leaflet of the RBC membrane was identified in schizont infected RBCs. Antibodies to PfSEP-1 decrease parasite replication by 60% by arresting schizont rupture. Active vaccination with rPbSEP-1 resulted in a 4.5 fold reduction in parasitemia after challenge with P. berghei ANKA parasites. Children in the cohort experienced a dramatically increased incidence of severe malaria during periods with undetectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody levels (45 cases/23,806 child weeks) compared to periods with detectable antibody levels (0 cases/1,688 child weeks). By blocking schizont egress, PfSEP-1 synergizes with vaccines targeting hepatocyte and red cell invasion.

Identification and In Vitro Evaluation of Vaccine Candidates

Using a differential screening method, the P. falciparum blood stage proteome with plasma from resistant and susceptible two yr old children was interrogated to identify parasite proteins that are the targets of protective antibody responses. We focused on 2 yr old children because in our cohort, resistance to parasitemia is first detected at this age (FIG. 6). We selected twelve resistant and eleven susceptible 2 year old children with careful matching for potential non-immunologic factors, which may be related to resistance (see Table below and FIG. 16). Resistance was determined based on the geometric mean parasite density on all blood films collected between ages 2 and 3.5 yrs. We pooled plasma collected at age 2 yrs (+/−2 weeks) from the resistant individuals (RP) and susceptible individuals (SP) and performed differential screening experiments on a P. falciparum 3D7 strain blood stage cDNA library. We screened 1.25×10⁶ clones and identified three clones that were uniquely recognized by RP, but not SP. The sequences of these clones were compared to the published falciparum genome (PlasmoDB.org) and found to encode nt 2,431-3,249 of PF3D7_1021800—a gene on chromosome 10, nt 3,490-5,412 of PF3D7 1134300—a gene on chromosome 11, and nt 201-1,052 of PF3D7 1335100—which encodes merozoite surface protein-7 (MSP-7)—a protein involved in RBC invasion which is currently under study as a potential vaccine candidate.

In silico analysis (PlasmoDBorg) predicts that PF3D7_1021800 contains a 6225 bp gene that encodes a 244-kDa acidic phospho-protein (SEQ ID NO:2), contains two introns near its 3′ end, and has syntenic orthologs in all rodent and human malarias evaluated. Based on in vitro experiments, we designate the protein product of PF3D7_1021800 as Plasmodium falciparum Schizont Egress Protein 1 (PfSEP-1). PF3D7_1021800 mRNA expression increases throughout blood stage schizogeny and the gene displays minimal sequence variation, with no SNPs in the cloned region (nt 2,431-3,249), across fifteen field and laboratory isolates (FIG. 16). A recently reported deep sequencing effort on 227 field samples identified 3 non-synonymous and 1 synonymous SNPs in the cloned region. We have sequenced nt 2,431-3,249 of PF3D7_1021800 in 6 field isolates obtained from children in our cohort and found one isolate with a six bp insertion (encoding Asp-Gly-Asp-Gly instead of the canonical Asp-Gly) as well as one synonymous SNP. These data indicate that there is little or no sequence variability among parasite strains.

PfSEP-1 has no significant homology to proteins of known function. To explore the function of PfSEP-1, we have constructed vectors designed to disrupt the coding and promoter regions of the gene through the well described process of homologous recombination⁹. We have obtained episomal carriage of both targeting vectors, but have not recovered homologous integrants with either vector, suggesting that expression of PF3D7_1021800 is essential for blood stage replication (FIGS. 8A-C).

We have expressed and purified the polypeptide encoded by nt 2,431-3,249 of PF3D7_1021800 (aa 810-1083) in E. coli and designated this recombinant protein rPfSEP-1A (FIG. 9). Using an independent selection of resistant and susceptible individuals (see Table below), we confirmed and generalized the differential recognition of rPfSEP-1A (SEQ ID NO:2) in an ELISA based assay. IgG antibody recognition of rSEP-1A was 4.4 fold higher in RP (n=11) than in SP (n=14, P<0.0002, FIG. 10), yet did not differ for other malarial proteins or controls.

Variable Resistant Susceptible P value^(a) Number of Subjects 12 11 — Hemoglobin phenotype (% AS) 16.6 0 0.47 Sex (% female) 41.6 45.4 1 Weeks of follow-up (median [IQR]) 140.5 [44.5]  152 [44]  0.31 # of Blood smears from age 2-3.5 yrs (median [IQR]) 16.5 [21.5] 21 [24] 0.31 # of Positive Blood smears from age 2-3.5 yrs (median [IQR]) 0 [1]  4 [10] 0.04 # of anti-malarial treatments before age 2 yrs (median [IQR])   2 [1.75] 8 [8] 0.01 Pregnancy malaria (%) 16.6 9 1 Maternal age (yrs, median [IQR]) 22.5 [9.5]  28 [10] 0.35 Birth Season (% in High Season) 25 9 0.59 Children using Bed Net (%) 33.3 0 0.09 # of Previous Pregnancies (median [IQR]) 0 [2] 1 [2] 0.19 Parasite density (parasites/200 WBCs) at 2 yr blood draw (median [IQR]) 0 [0] 0 [0] 1 Parasite density (parasites/200 WBCs) from age 2-3.5 yrs (median [IQR])   0 [25.6] 320.3 [944.1] 0.05 ^(a)Comparisons of catagorical variables by 2 tailed Fisher's exact test. Comparisons of continuous variables by Mann-Whitney U test

Variable Resistant Susceptible P value^(a) Number of Subjects 11 14 1 Hemoglobin phenotype (% AS) 36 21 0.66 Sex (% female) 45 43 1 Weeks of follow-up (median [IQR]) 154 [14]  165 [19]  0.34 # of Blood smears from age 2-3.5 yrs (median [IQR])  14 [5.8] 20.5 [9.5]  0.02 # of Positive Blood smears from age 2-3.5 yrs (median [IQR]) 0 7.8 [6]   <0.001 # of anti-malarial treatments before age 2 yrs (median [IQR]) 2.6 [2.9] 6.3 [3.1] 0.008 Pregnancy malaria (%) 9 14 1 Maternal age (yrs, median [IQR]) 27 [8]  27 [7]  0.85 Birth Season (% in High Season) 73 50 0.41 Children using Bed Net (%) 0  0 1 # of Previous Pregnancies (median [IQR])   1 [3.0]   1 [3.0] 0.89 Parasite density (parasites/200 WBCs) at 2 yr blood draw (median [IQR]) 0 [0] 0 [0] 1 Parasite density (parasites/200 WBCs) from age 2-3.5 yrs (median [IQR]) 0 [0] 2106.9 [2700]   <0.001 ^(a)Comparisons of categorical variables by 2 tailed Fisher's exact test. Comparisons of continuous variables by Mann-Whitney U test

We have cloned this sequence into a eukaryotic expression plasmid (VR2001), immunized mice and generated anti-rPfSEP-1A anti-sera. To confirm that PF3D7_1021800 encodes a parasite protein, we probed P. falciparum 3D7 infected and uninfected RBCs with both pre-immune and post-immune sera. Anti-rPfSEP-1A recognized a 244-kDa protein in infected but not uninfected RBC (FIGS. 11A-B).

We performed growth inhibition assays using anti-rPfSEP-1A antisera prepared by both DNA vaccination and recombinant protein immunization . Parasites were synchronized to the ring stage, cultured to obtain mature trophozoites and then incubated with anti-rPfSEP-1A antisera or controls for 24 hr followed by enumeration of newly invaded ring stage parasites. Anti-rPfSEP-1A generated by both DNA plasmid and recombinant protein based immunization inhibited parasite growth by 58-75% across three parasite strains compared to controls (all P<0.009). Antisera prepared by DNA vaccination against an irrelevant falciparum protein (phosphatidylglycerophosphate synthase, PF3D7_0820200) showed no growth inhibition.

As shown in FIG. 19, rabbit anti-PfSEP-1 inhibits parasite growth/invasion by 68% in vitro. Ring stage 3D7 parasites were synchronized twice using sorbitol plated at 1% parasitemia, allowed to mature to trophozoites (24 hrs), followed by addition of anti-clone 2 rabbit sera (1:10 dilution). Negative controls included no rabbit sera and pre-immune rabbit sera (1:10 dilution). Parasites were cultured for 24 hrs and ring stage parasites were enumerated by microscopic examination. Bars represent the mean of 3 independent replicates. Error bars represent SEMs. P<0.0001 for comparison between pre and post immune rabbit sera by non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test.

We immunolocalized PfSEP-1 by both immunofluorescence confocal microscopy and immunogold transmission electron microscopy (FIGS. 2A-C). Anti-PfSEP-1 did not bind to free merozoites, rings or late trophozoite stage parasites, but did specifically recognize an antigen expressed by late schizont infected RBC (FIGS. 2A-B). In non-permeabilized, non-fixed schizont infected RBCs, PfSEP-1 co-localized with glycophorin A (FIG. 2C). This localization was further evaluated by immunoelectron microscopy (FIG. 2D). In non-permeabilized, non-fixed schizont infected RBCs, PfSEP-1 localized to the schizont/parasitophorous vacuole membrane, Maurer's clefts and the inner leaflet of the RBC membrane while glycophorin A was confined to the outer leaflet of the RBC membrane. This pattern of staining was observed in essentially all of the late schizont infected RBCs examined. No staining for PfSEP-1 was observed in uninfected RBC or ring/trophozoite infected RBCs (FIGS. 13A-B). The close juxtaposition of these structures in late schizont infected RBCs with the RBC outer membrane explains the apparent co-localization of PfSEP-1 with glycophorin A observed by confocal microscopy. The accessibility of antibodies to PfSEP-1 in non-permeabilized, non-fixed schizont infected RBCs is consistent with the known permeability of parasitized RBCs at the later stages of schizogony.

The localization of PfSEP-1 was not consistent with a role in RBC invasion, rather it suggested a role in parasite egress from infected RBCs. To determine the mechanism of growth inhibition we performed schizont arrest assays using anti-rPfSEP-1A antisera prepared by both DNA vaccination (FIGS. 3A-C) and recombinant protein immunization (FIGS. 14A-B). Parasites were synchronized to the ring stage at high (3.5%) parasite density, cultured to obtain early schizonts and then incubated with anti-rPfSEP-1A antisera or controls for 12 hr followed by enumeration of remaining schizont stage parasites. Under these conditions, the majority of schizont infected RBCs should rupture, releasing merozoites, which would invade new RBCs and develop into ring stage parasites. Anti-rPfSEP-1A generated by both DNA plasmid and recombinant protein based immunization dramatically inhibited schizont egress resulting in 4.3-6.8 fold higher proportion of schizonts across three parasite strains compared to controls (all P<0.009).

Active Vaccination with SEP-1 Protects Mice from P. berghei Challenge

To evaluate the protective efficacy of active vaccination with SEP-1 in vivo, we cloned the P. berghei ANKA strain ortholog of PfSEP-1 (nt 2173-3000) into the expression plasmid pET30 and expressed and purified rPbSEP-1A (aa 725-1000) from (FIG. 4A). We vaccinated Balb/C mice (n=11) with rPbSEP-1A in TiterMax Gold adjuvant or adjuvant alone (n=11), measured their antibody responses to rPbSEP-1A (FIG. 4B), and challenged them with 10⁶ P. berghei ANKA parasite infected red blood cells intraperitoneally. Mice vaccinated with rPbSEP-1A had 4.5 fold decreased parasitemia on day 7 post challenge compared to controls treated with adjuvant alone (FIG. 4C).

Human Antibody Responses to PfSEP-1

To evaluate the impact of naturally acquired anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies on clinical malaria, we measured anti-PfSEP-1 IgG antibody levels using a fluorescent, bead-based assay in our birth cohort and related these levels to subsequent malaria outcomes. We measured anti-PfSEP-1 IgG antibody levels in available plasma obtained at scheduled, non-sick visits between 2 and 3.5 yrs of life (total of 156 antibody measures on 155 children). Anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies were detectable in 3.2% of these samples and children were followed for a total of 6,350 child-weeks of observation (201 weeks with detectable anti-PfSEP-1 and 6,149 weeks with undetectable levels). We related the presence of detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies to malarial outcomes, including parasite density, mild malaria, severe malaria, all cause and malaria attributed mortality. For each antibody measurement, the time interval examined for malaria outcomes extended from the time of the antibody measurement until the child had a subsequent antibody determination or completed the study.

We used generalized estimating equations (GEE) based longitudinal regression models to evaluate the relationship between time varying anti-PfSEP-1 antibody responses and dichotomous malaria endpoints. Similar GEE based linear regression models were used for the continuous endpoints of parasite density on all available blood smears and parasite density on positive blood smears. These models adjust for both potential confounders and the lack of independence (correlation) among observations taken from the same subject over time. Potential confounders included hemoglobin phenotype, age, and average prior parasitemia on all blood smears.

Children without detectable anti-PfSEP-1 IgG antibody had higher parasite densities on all available blood smears, higher parasite densities on positive blood smears, and increased incidence of mild malaria. (FIGS. 15A-C).

Severe malaria did not occur during periods when children had detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody levels (0 cases/201 child weeks with detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody vs. 6 cases/6,149 child weeks with undetectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody), however the small number of total cases precluded meaningful analysis. In our cohort, severe malaria is strongly age dependent with the majority of cases occurring before 2 yrs of age. To increase the number of severe malaria cases for analysis, we extended the age range examined to 1.5-3.5 yrs of life encompassing 687 antibody measures on 453 children. Anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies were detectable in 6.0% of these samples and children were followed for a total of 25,494 child-weeks of observation (1,688 child weeks with detectable anti-PfSEP-1 and 23,806 child weeks with undetectable levels). Strikingly, severe malaria did not occur during periods when children had detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody levels (0 cases/1,688 child weeks with detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody vs. 45 cases/23,806 child weeks with undetectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody, FIG. 5).

Individuals without detectable anti-PfSEP-1 IgG antibody had significantly increased risk of developing severe clinical malaria (adjusted OR 4.4; Type III fixed effects P<0.01) compared to individuals with detectable anti-PfSEP-1 IgG antibody levels even after adjusting for potential confounders. There was no significant difference in the risk for all-cause mortality or malaria-associated mortality, though the event rates for mortality were low. These results represent the first demonstration that antibodies that specifically block schizont egress can protect against severe malaria in humans.

Blocking Parasite Egress Protects against Malaria

Falciparum malaria remains a leading cause of childhood mortality and vaccines are urgently needed to attenuate this public health threat. We report the rational identification of vaccine candidates by identifying parasite proteins uniquely recognized by antibodies expressed by resistant, but not susceptible children. Using a differential screen, we identified two genes encoding useful vaccine antigens as well as MSP-7, a known vaccine candidate. We have extensively characterized PfSEP-1, the protein product of PF3D7 1021800. PfSEP-1 localizes to the schizont/parasitophorous vacuole membrane, Maurer's clefts and the inner leaflet of the RBC membrane in schizont infected RBCs. PfSEP-1 is accessible to antibodies during late schizogeny, and displays minimal sequence variation, particularly in the region identified by our differential screening experiments (aa 810-1083; SEQ ID NO:2). Antibodies to PfSEP-1 significantly attenuate parasite growth via a unique mechanism; arresting schizont egress from infected RBCs without causing schizont agglutination.

Schizont egress is a complex tightly regulated process involving calcium dependent phosphorylation of parasite target proteins followed by proteolytic remodeling of parasite, as well as RBC cytoskeletal proteins. One of these proteolytic events involves SERA-5, the target of antibodies that agglutinate merozoites and schizonts and mediate schizont killing in cooperation with complement. Unlike SERA 5 and other proteins involved in schizont egress, PfSEP-1 was not identified in global profiles of proteolysis during schizont egress, and we did not observe any evidence of cleavage events within PfSEP-1 at any blood stage of development. The localization of PfSEP-1 to the inner RBC leaflet is consistent with a role in remodeling the RBC cytoskeleton prior to rupture.

In active vaccination experiments, rPb SEP-1A conferred marked protection against P. berghei ANKA challenge as evidenced by a 4.5 fold reduction in parasitemia seven days post-challenge. In addition, vaccination with rPb SEP-1A resulted in self-cure in one out of eleven vaccinated mice. These data constitute the first report of protection in P. berghei by vaccines targeting schizont egress and offer a pathway forward for advancing these vaccines toward non-human primate models.

In our longitudinal birth cohort, anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies were associated with significant protection from severe malaria, with no cases occurring while children had detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies. This represents the first time that antibodies that specifically block schizont egress have been associated with protection from severe malaria. Under conditions of natural exposure, only 6% of 1.5 to 3.5 yr old children in our cohort had detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies. This low natural prevalence suggests that adjuvanted vaccination with PfSEP-1 could have a marked impact on reducing severe malaria in young children.

The data validate the field-to-lab-to-field based strategy for the rational identification of vaccine candidates and indicate that PfSEP-1 is useful as a vaccine for pediatric falciparum malaria. By blocking schizont egress, PfSEP-1 synergizes with vaccines targeting hepatocyte and red cell invasion such as MSP-4, MSP-7, and/or RTSS.

The following materials and methods were used to generate the data described herein.

Study Population

Subjects participated in the Mother Offspring Malaria Studies (MOMS) project, which is based at Muheza Designated District Hospital (DDH), in north eastern Tanzania. Mothers presenting at Muheza DDH for delivery were enrolled and provided signed, informed consent prior to participation of themselves and their newborns in the study. Details of the MOMS study design, enrolment methods, and exclusion criteria have been described (Mutabingwa et al., PLoS Med 2, e407 (2005), and Kabyemela et al., J. Infect. Dis. 198, 163-166 (2008))

Inclusion Criteria and Clinical Monitoring

We monitored N=785 children for P. falciparum infection from birth up to 3.5 years of age. Children were evaluated at routine, well-child visits by a clinician every two weeks from birth to one year of age, and monthly thereafter, including blood smear analysis. Routine blood samples were collected once every 6 months from 1.5 to 3.5 years of life. Blood smears and blood samples were also collected any time the child became sick. Sick children were examined by a medical officer upon presentation to the hospital or mobile clinic. Treatment outside the study was minimized by active, weekly surveillance by our mobile clinics.

Clinical malaria was defined as asexual P. falciparum parasitemia by blood smear coupled with symptoms suggestive of malaria such as temperature >37.5° C., nausea or vomiting, irritability, and poor feeding. Prompt treatment was provided to sick children according to the guidelines of the Tanzanian Ministry of Health, and study participants were instructed to obtain all medications including antimalarials through the project staff.

Sample Collection and Processing

Venous blood was collected and stored at 4° C. until processing. Following centrifugation, plasma was stored at −80° C. P. falciparum parasitemia was determined by Giemsa-stained thick blood smears prepared from capillary or venous blood. Parasite density was expressed as the number of asexual stage parasites/200 white blood cells in the thick smear. Sickle cell trait was determined by electrophoresis (Helena Laboratories, Beaumont, Tex. USA). Hemograms were obtained on an impedance-based analyzer (Abbott Cell Dyne® 1200).

Case Definitions

Mild malaria was defined as a positive bloodsmear and one or more of the following: 1) anemia defined by Hgb <6 g/dL; 2) vomiting; 3) diarrheal disease or gastroenteritis; 4) lower respiratory infection; or 5) oral temperature >=38 deg C.

Severe malaria was defined as a positive bloodsmear and one or more of the following: 1) respiratory distress defined by respiratory rate of >40/min for children older than two months of age or a respiratory rate of >50/min for children less than two months of age; 2) a history of one or more convulsions in the twenty-four hours prior to or during hospitalization; 3) prostration defined by inability to sit unaided; 4) hypoglycemia defined by glucose <2.2 mmol/L; 5) severe anemia defined by Hgb <6 g/dL; or 6) oral temperature >40 deg C.

Malaria-associated mortality was defined as death with a positive blood film obtained during the terminal illness. One child who died of bacterial meningitis, but had a positive blood film was adjudicated as a non-malarial death.

Selection of Resistant and Susceptible Individuals

We excluded individuals with less than 9 of the total n=18 scheduled monthly blood smears collected between the ages of 2-3.5 yrs, individuals with less than 200 ul of plasma available from the plasma sample obtained at age 2 (+/−2 weeks), and individuals who were parasitemic at the time the 2 yrs (+/−2 weeks) plasma sample was obtained. We then rank ordered individuals based on the geometric mean parasite density on all blood films collected between ages 2 and 3.5 yrs. This mean parasite density included the scheduled monthly blood smears as well as positive blood smears obtained during sick visits. Ten individuals from the high and low extremes of this distribution were chosen to comprise the Resistant and Susceptible groups. Selections were made with matching based on village of residence, # of malaria-associated clinic visits, sex, and # of doses of anti-malarials. Potential confounders examined included: Hgb phenotype, presence of placental malaria, maternal age, birth season, use of bed nets, and # of previous pregnancies. A second, independent selection of resistant and susceptible individuals (table S2) was chosen for ELISA-based confirmatory assays.

Whole Proteome Differential Screening

We obtained a P. falciparum blood-stage cDNA expression library in Lambda Zap (MRA-299) from MR4. We plated this library at 25,000 clones/plate on 150 mm NZY plates in XL-1 Blue strain of E. coli. Duplicate IPTG-soaked nitrocellulose filters were prepared from each of 50 plates. Filters were blocked in 5% milk, TBS pH 7.4 (MTBS). Resistant plasma (RP) and susceptible plasma (SP) were diluted 1:100 in MTBS. Duplicate filters were probed with either RP or SP for 3 hr at 37 deg Celsius. Filters were washed 3×5 min in 0.05% Tween 20, TBS pH 7.4 (TTBS) and probed with alkaline phosphatase conjugated anti-human IgG diluted 1:5000 in MTBS for 1 hr at 37 deg Celsius. Filters were washed 3×5 min in TTBS. Filters were developed in BCIP/NBT. Clones which reacted with RP but not SP were cored out of their corresponding plate, eluted in SM buffer, re-plated and re-screened. Three rounds of plaque purification typically resulted in homogeneous clones which are reactive with RP but not reactive with SP. cDNA inserts uniquely reactive with RP were recovered by PCR amplification using vector specific primers and sequenced.

PfSEP-1A Expression and Purification

We subcloned the ORF encoding as 810-1083 of PfSEP-1 into pET30 (Novagen) and transformed the resulting plasmid into the expression host E. coli BL21(DE3) (Novagen). Transformants were grown in Terrific broth supplemented with 100 tig/mL kanamycin, at 37 deg C in a 10 L fermenter with oxygen sparging (10 L/min) until OD600=8.0. Isopropyl-b-D-thiogalactopyranoside was added to a final concentration of 1 mmol/L, and the culture was fed continuously with 0.3 g/ml glucose, 0.09 g/ml yeast extract at 50 ml/hr for 12 h. Cultures were harvested by centrifugation and 750 gr of wet cell paste was resuspended in 10 L of 10 mmol/L potassium phosphate, 150 mmol/L NaCl, and 10 mmol/L imidazole (pH 8.0) and lysed by high pressure disruption at 20, 000 PSI (Microfluidics, Model 110-T). The lysate was clarified by tangential flow microfiltration (filter area 1 m2, pore size 1 um, Milipore) and 8 L of clarified lysate was recovered.

Protein purification was achieved by a 4-step process on BioPilot chromatography equipment (Pharmacia). Briefly, clarified lysate was applied to a FineLine Pilot 35 (GE Healthcare) column containing 90 mL of Ni-NTA Superflow Resin (Novagen). The protein of interest was eluted with a stepped gradient containing increasing concentrations of imidazole. Fractions containing the protein of interest were pooled, adjusted to 400 mmol/L ammonium sulfate, 10 mmol/L DTT and further purified, by hydrophobic-interaction chromatography on a FineLine Pilot 35 (GE Healthcare) column containing 150 ml of Source 15PHE (GE Healthcare). Recombinant proteins were eluted with a linear gradient of elution buffer (10 mmol/L Tris, 1 mmole/L DTT, 1 mmol/L EDTA [pH 8.0]). Fractions containing the protein of interest were pooled, and further purified, by anion exchange chromatography on a FineLine Pilot 35 (GE Healthcare) column containing 130 ml of MacroPrep High Q (BioRad). Recombinant proteins were eluted with a linear gradient of elution buffer (10 mmol/L Tris, 1 mole/L NaCl, 1 mmole/L DTT, 1 mmol/L EDTA [pH 8.0]). Final purification was achieved by ceramic hydroxyapatite chromatography on a FineLine Pilot 35 (GE Healthcare) column containing 70 ml of CHT type 1 (BioRad). Recombinant proteins were eluted with a linear gradient of elution buffer (500 mmole/L potassium phosphate, and 1 mmole/L DTT, pH 7.4)

Purified rPfSEP-1A was buffer exchanged into 10 mmol/L sodium phosphate, 0.05% Tween 20, 3% sucrose and concentrated to 500 μg/ml by tangential flow ultrafiltration (filter area 50 cm2, pore size 5 kDa, Pall). rPFSEP-1A was lyophilized at 500 μg/vial and stoppered under nitrogen. Endotoxin levels were less than 2 EU/mg protein as determined by an FDA cleared assay (Lonza). Typical yields are >50 mg rPfSEP-1A per 750 gr of wet cell paste.

Pb SEP-1A Expression and Purification

We subcloned the ORF encoding as 725-1000 of PbSEP-1 into pET30 (Novagen) and transformed the resulting plasmid into the expression host E. coli BL21(DE3) (Novagen). Transformants were grown in Terrific broth supplemented with 100 μg/mL kanamycin, at 37 deg C in a 10 L fermenter with oxygen sparging (10 L/min) until OD600=8.0. Isopropyl-b-D-thiogalactopyranoside was added to a final concentration of 1 mmol/L, and the culture was fed continuously with 0.3 g/ml glucose, 0.09 g/ml yeast extract at 50 ml/hr for 12 h. Cultures were harvested by centrifugation and 750 gr of wet cell paste was resuspended in 10 L of 10 mmol/L potassium phosphate, 150 mmol/L NaCl, and 10 mmol/L imidazole (pH 8.0) and lysed by high pressure disruption at 20, 000 PSI (Microfluidics, Model 110-T). The lysate was clarified by tangential flow microfiltration (filter area 1 m2, pore size 1 um, Milipore) and 8 L of clarified lysate was recovered.

Protein purification was achieved by a 3-step process on BioPilot chromatography equipment (Pharmacia). Briefly, clarified lysate was applied to a FineLine Pilot 35 (GE Healthcare) column containing 90 mL of Ni-NTA Superflow Resin (Novagen). The protein of interest was eluted with a stepped gradient containing increasing concentrations of imidazole. Fractions containing the protein of interest were pooled, adjusted to 400 mmol/L ammonium sulfate, 10 mmol/L DTT and further purified, by hydrophobic-interaction chromatography on a FineLine Pilot 35 (GE Healthcare) column containing 150 ml of Source 15PHE (GE Healthcare). Recombinant proteins were eluted with a linear gradient of elution buffer (10 mmol/L Tris, 1 mmole/L DTT, 1 mmol/L EDTA [pH 8.0]). Fractions containing the protein of interest were pooled, and further purified, by anion exchange chromatography on a FineLine Pilot 35 (GE Healthcare) column containing 130 ml of MacroPrep High Q (BioRad). Recombinant proteins were eluted with a linear gradient of elution buffer (10 mmol/L Tris, 1 mole/L NaCl, 1 mmole/L DTT, 1 mmol/L EDTA [pH 8.0]).

Purified rPbSEP-1A was buffer exchanged into 10 mmol/L sodium phosphate, 0.05% Tween 20, 3% sucrose and concentrated to 125 μg/ml by tangential flow ultrafiltration (filter area 50 cm2, pore size 5 kDa, Pall). rPFSEP-1A was lyophilized at 125 μg/vial and stoppered under nitrogen. Endotoxin levels were less than 2 EU/mg protein as determined by an FDA cleared assay (Lonza). Typical yields are >50 mg rPbSEP-1A per 750 gr of wet cell paste.

Parasite Strains and Culture

P. falciparum strains (3D7, D10, and W2) were obtained from MR4. The parasites were cultured in vitro according to the methods of Trager and Jensen with minor modifications 29. Briefly, parasites were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium containing 25 mm HEPES, 5% human 0+ erythrocytes, 0.5% Albumax II (Invitrogen) or 10% heat inactivated human AB+serum, 24 mm sodium bicarbonate, and 10 μg/ml gentamycin at 37° C. with 5% CO2, 1% 02, and 94% N2.

P. berghei ANKA was obtained from MR4 as a stabilite and was expanded in Balb/C mice prior to challenge studies.

Anti-PfSEP-1 Antisera Production

Mouse anti-PfSEP-1 antisera was produced by either DNA or recombinant protein immunization. For DNA immunization, we subcloned the ORF encoding as 810-1083 of PfSEP-1 into VR2001, transformed into the host E. coli NovaBlue (Novagen), and purified endotoxin free plasmid (Endofree Giga, Qiagen). Balb/C mice were immunized with 180 μg of plasmid (50 ug intramuscular injection in each hind leg and 80 μg intradermal injection at base of tail) followed by 80 μg intradermal injections at base of tail every two weeks for a total of four doses. For protein immunization, we emulsified rPfSEP-1 in an equal volume of TiterMax adjuvant (CytRx Corporation) and injected 50 μg of rPfSEP-1 intraperitoneally at two week intervals for a total of four doses.

Western Blot

Parasite pellets were prepared by treatment of parasitized RBCs with 0.15% saponin in phosphate buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4 on ice for 10 min followed by centrifugation (3,000×g, 5 min), and resuspension in cold PBS, and centrifugation (3,000×g, 5 min). Parasite pellets or rPfSEP-1A were dissolved in SDS sample loading buffer (Bio-Rad), heated to 95 deg C for 10 min, and proteins were separated in 4-11% gradient SDS-PAGE gels. Separated proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes which were blocked in 5% milk PBS (pH 7.4) and 0.05% Tween 20 for 1 h. Membranes were probed with polyclonal anti-PfSEP-1A or pre-immune mouse sera, detected by use of anti-mouse IgG antibody conjugated to alkaline phosphatase, and developed with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate/nitro blue tetrazolium (Sigma).

SNP Detection in Field Isolates

We extracted DNA from filter paper containing dried blood spots obtained from six parasitemic children in our cohort (QIAmp DNA Blood Mini Kit, Qiagen). We amplified nt 2,431-3,249 of PF3D7_1021800 from extracted DNA using a nested PCR based approach. First round primers were: F1 5′-GAAGATGTTTGTCATAATAATAACGTGGAAGACC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 49), R1 5′-TCCTACAACATCTATTTCTCCTGTGTAAGG-3′. (SEQ ID NO: 50) Second round primers were: F2 5′-GAATAAAAAAATGGATGAGATGAAAG-3′(SEQ ID NO: 51), R2 5′-CTATTACTATCCTCATTTGCATCTGTATATTTATCC-3′(SEQ ID NO: 52). First round PCR conditions were: 10 min initial denature at 94 deg C followed by 40 cycles of 45 sec at 94 deg C, 60 sec at 55 deg C, 90 sec at 70 deg C, extension at 70 deg C for 10 min. Second round PCR conditions were: 10 min initial denature at 94 deg C followed by 35 cycles of 45 sec at 94 deg C, 60 sec at 55 deg C, 60 sec at 70 deg C, extension at 70 deg C for 10 min. DNA fragments were purified with Quickclean II PCR Kit (GenScript), cloned into pDrive (Qiagen) and sequenced.

PfSEP-1 Knock Out/Down Strategy

We constructed vectors designed to disrupt the promoter region (knockdown) and the coding region (knock-out) of the gene encoding PfSEP-1. For the knock-down construct, we amplified a 749 bp segment (−493-257 bp) from 3D7 genomic DNA using PCR forward primers 5′-GCACTGCAGAGCACTGAATAAATGAAATG-3′(SEQ ID NO: 53) and reverse primer 5′-GCAGCGGCCGCGTGGATGCACCATCATCGAG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 54). For the knockout construct, we amplified a 868 bp segment (232-1099 bp) from 3D7 genomic DNA using PCR forward primers 5′-GCACTGCAGGAGTTATCTCGATGATGGTG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 55) and reverse primer 5′-GCAGCGGCCGCGATCCATGATATTAACATGGCTC-3′(SEQ ID NO: 56).

Amplified DNA fragments were digested with the restriction enzymes Pstl and NotI and cloned into plasmid pHD22Y 30. The DNA sequences and location of all inserts were confirmed by using vector specific primers in the sequencing reaction which spanned the cloning region of the vector.

Asexual stages of W2 and 3D7 parasites were cultured as described above. The parasites were synchronized using 5% d-sorbitol, and schizont stages at 10% parasitemia were purified using a Percoll-sorbitol separation method 31. Uninfected RBCs were electroporated with 200 lag of supercoiled pHD22Y containing DNA inserts as described 9′32. Following transformation, purified schizonts were added to electroporated RBCs and were maintained in culture for 48 h before the addition of drug WR99210 (Sigma) to a final concentration of 5 nmole/L. Drug-resistant parasites appeared three to four weeks after transfection. Episomal carriage of plasmids in the drug resistant parasites was confirmed by PCR for both constructs using genomic DNA obtained from the drug resistant parasites and vector specific primers F 1 5′-CATGTTTTGTAATTTATGGGATAGCG-3′(SEQ ID NO: 57) and R1 5′-CGCCAAGCTCGAAATTAACCCTCAC-3′(SEQ ID NO: 58). Six to eight weeks after transfection, we tested for chromosomal integration for both constructs by PCR using genomic DNA obtained from the drug resistant parasites and chromosomal and vector specific primers F2 5′-GCCACATATAATTCTTGTACTTGTC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 59) and R2 5′-CGAAATTAACCCTCACTAAAGG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 60) or R3 5′-GACAAGTACAAGAATTATATGTGGC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 61) for knockdown constructs, or F2 5′-GTATGATGGAAAATAAATACCCAAATG-3′(SEQ ID NO: 62) and R2 CGAAATTAACCCTCACTAAAGG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 63) or R3 5′-GACAAGTACAAGAATTATATGTGGC-3′(SEQ ID NO: 64) for knockout constructs (FIGS. 16A-C).

Anti-PfSEP-1 Antibody Assays

Initial, confirmatory antibody assays were performed with rPfSEP-1A coated ELISA plates according to known methods (FIG. 18).

To measure IgG anti-rPfSEP-1A antibody levels in the entire cohort, a bead-based assay was used. 100 μg of rPfSEP-1A or 100 ug of BSA was conjugated to 1.25×10⁷ microspheres (Luminex) and conjugated rPfSEP-1 and BSA beads were pooled and lyophilized in single use aliquots. Reconstituted beads were incubated for 30 min at 37 deg C with human plasma samples at 1:80 dilution in Assay Buffer E (ABE, PBS pH 7.4 containing 0.1% BSA, 0.05% Tween-20, and 0.05% sodium azide) in microtiter filter bottom plates (Millipore). Beads were washed three times in ABE by vacuum filtration and incubated for 30 min at 37 deg C with biotinylated anti-human IgG (Pharmingen) diluted 1:1000 in ABE. Beads were washed three times in ABE by vacuum filtration and incubated for 10 min at 37 deg C with phycoerythrin conjugated streptavidin (Pharmingen) diluted 1:500 in ABE. Beads were washed three times in ABE by vacuum filtration, resuspended in ABE and analyzed on a BioPlex 200 multi-analyte analyzer. Fluorescence values for BSA beads were subtracted from rPfSEP-1A beads. The cut-off for detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody levels was defined as fluorescence values greater than the mean +2SD fluorescence level of 95 healthy North American children.

Growth Inhibition Assays

Growth inhibition assays (GIA) were carried out with anti-PfSEP-1 mouse sera or controls. Sera were dialyzed overnight in PBS, pH7.4, heat inactivated at 56° C. for 30 min and pre-incubated with human RBC for 1 hour before use in GIA assays. GIA assays were carried out using W2, 3D7 and D10 strains of P. falciparun. Parasites were synchronized to the ring stage by treatment with 5% sorbitol 34 for three successive replication cycles and cultured to the mature trophozoite stage. Parasites at 0.3-0.4% parasitemia and 2% hematocrit were incubated with anti-sera at a final concentration of 10% in a final volume of 100 μl in microtiter wells. Cultures were performed in triplicate with five replicates (comprising a total of 15 individual wells) prepared for each treatment condition. After 24 hr, blood films were prepared from each replicate, stained with Giemsa, ring stage parasites were enumerated, and the results from the three wells were averaged.

Schizont Arrest Assays

Schizont arrest assay (SAA) were carried out with anti-PfSEP-1 mouse sera or controls. Sera were dialyzed overnight in PBS, pH7.4, heat inactivated at 56° C. for 30 min and pre-incubated with human RBC for 1 hour before use in SAA assays. SAA assays were carried out using W2 and 3D7 strains of P. falciparum. Parasites were synchronized to the ring stage by treatment with 5% sorbitol 34 for three successive replication cycles and cultured to the early-schizont stage. Parasites at 3.5% parasitemia and 2% hematocrit, consisting mainly of early schizonts were incubated with anti-sera at a final concentration of 10% in a final volume of 100 pl in microtiter wells. Cultures were performed in triplicate with five replicates (comprising a total of 15 individual wells) prepared for each treatment condition. After 12 hr, blood films were prepared from each replicate, stained with Giemsa, schizont stage parasites were enumerated, and the results from the three wells were averaged.

Immunofluorescence Assays

Blood smears of asynchronous 3D7 strain parasite cultures were prepared, fixed in cold methanol for 15 minutes, and probed with anti-PfSEP-1 prepared by DNA vaccination, pre-immune sera, or rabbit anti-PfMSP-1 (MR4) diluted 1:200 in PBS, 5% BSA, pH 7.4. Blood smears were incubated with primary antibodies for 1 hr at 25 deg C, washed three times in PBS, 0.05% Tween-20 and incubated with goat anti-mouse IgG conjugated with Alexa fluor 488 (Molecular Probes) and goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with Alexa Fluor 594 (Molecular Probes). Blood smears were incubated for 10 minute in 1 lig/ml of 4′,6′-diamino-2-phenylindole (DAPI, Sigma) to label nuclei and cover slipped with ProLong Gold anti-fade reagent (Invitrogen). Blood smears were imaged using a confocal microscope (Leica SP2, Leica Microsystems, Exton, Pa.) equipped with a 100× oil immersion objective and sequential Z-sections of the infected RBC were collected.

For localization of PfSEP-1 in late stage schizonts, we performed live cell staining and imaging. Briefly, 3D7 strain parasites were synchronized to the ring stage by treatment with 5% sorbitol 34 for three successive replication cycles and cultured to the early-schizont stage. Anti-PfSEP-1 prepared by DNA vaccination (1:200) and rabbit anti-human glycophorin A (1:200) were incubated with live schizont infected RBCs in PBS, 5% BSA pH 7.4 for one hr at 25 deg C. Samples were washed three times in PBS and incubated with goat anti-mouse IgG conjugated with Alexa Fluor 594 (Molecular Probes) and goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with Alexa Fluor 488 (Molecular Probes). Samples were washed 3 times with PBS and incubated for 10 minute in 1 μg/ml of 4′,6′-diamino-2-phenylindole (DAPI, Sigma) to label nuclei. Blood smears were prepared and cover slipped with ProLong Gold anti-fade reagent (Invitrogen). Blood smears were imaged using a confocal microscope (Leica SP2, Leica Microsystems, Exton, Pa.) equipped with a 100× oil immersion objective and sequential Z-sections of the infected RBC were collected.

Immunoelectron Microscopy

3D7 strain parasites were synchronized to the ring stage by treatment with 5% sorbitol 34 for three successive replication cycles and cultured to the early-schizont stage. Samples were blocked for 1 hour at 25 deg C in I× PBS containing 2% BSA. Samples were incubated with anti-PfSEP-1 prepared by DNA vaccination (diluted 1:50 in PBS) and rabbit anti-human glycophorin-A polyclonal sera (diluted 1:50 in PBS) for 3 hr at 25 deg C. Pre-immune mouse sera was used as a negative control. Samples were washed three times in 1× PBS, and incubated for 1 h at 25 deg C with 5 or 18-nm gold-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Invitrogen) and 10-nm gold-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Invitrogen). Samples were washed three times in I× PBS, and were fixed for 30 min at 4° C. with 2% glutaraldehyde, 1% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodyldate buffer. Samples were dehydrated, embedded in Epon (EMS), sectioned on an ultra-microtome, counter stained for 10 min in 5% aqueous uranyl acetate and examined on a Philips CM10 electron microscope.

PbSEP-1A Antibody and Vaccination Studies

Antibody assays were performed with rPb SEP-1A coated ELISA plates according to our published methods 14 using anHRP conjugated anti-Mouse IgG antibody (Sigma) for detection of bound anti-Pb SEP-1A antibodies.

We immunized Balb/C mice (n=11) with 40 ug of rPbSEP-1A emulsified in 100 ul of TiterMax Gold adjuvant or adjuvant alone (n=11). Mice were immunized IP on days 0, 14, 28, and 42 and SC on day 56. On day 63, mice were challenged IP with 106 P. berghei ANKA parasite infected red blood cells. Mice were monitored daily from day 4 post-challenge with blood films to quantify parasitemia. Mice with parasitemias greater than 20% or exhibiting signs of illness (hunching, immobility, decreased food intake, etc.) were euthanized.

Statistical Analyses

To assess the relationship between anti-PfSEP-1 antibody responses and resistance to clinical malaria outcomes, we developed repeated measures models using SAS version 9.3 (Cary, N.C.). Generalized estimating equations using quasi-likelihood estimation were employed for these correlated (repeated measures) binary outcome data (Zeger, S. L. & Liang, K. Y. Longitudinal data analysis for discrete and continuous outcomes. Biometrics 42, 121-130 (1986)). Proc Genmod with a binomial distribution and logit link function were specified with separate models for each of the dichotomous clinical malaria outcomes. Due to the lack of independence of the repeated measures on children over time, we utilized longitudinal (repeated measures) modeling techniques in Proc Genmod to adjust for the correlation of responses within individuals. An autoregressive correlation structure was chosen given the expectation that the correlation of responses will decline over time. The fit of the model with different correlation structures was evaluated with the Quasi-Akaike Information Criterion (QIC). Similar GEE based linear regression models were used for the continuous endpoints of parasite density on all available blood smears and parasite density on positive blood smears. For some dichotomous malaria outcomes, including severe malaria, sampling zeros (i.e. no cases of severe malaria) occurred among children with detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody responses. This leads to “infinite bias” whereby odds ratios are skewed far above the true odds ratio. To address this, we used the Laplace correction, adding one adverse event to the group with detectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody levels and a proportional number of events to the group with undetectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody levels to restore the discordant pair ratios (Greenland, S., Schwartzbaum, J. A. & Finkle, W. D. Problems due to small samples and sparse data in conditional logistic regression analysis. Am J Epidemiol 151, 531-539 (2000)).

The data from these studies indicate that resistant individuals had 4 fold higher antibody levels to recombinant Pf SEP-1 compared to susceptible individuals, anti-Pf SEP-1 detects a 244 kDa antigen in P. falciparum infected, but not uninfected RBCs, Pf SEP-1 localizes to the schizont/parasitophorous vacuole membrane, Mauer's clefts and the inner leaflet of the RBC membrane in schizont infected RBCs, anti-Pf SEP-1 inhibits parasite growth by 48-74%. In schizont arrest assays, anti-Pf SEP-1 inhibits schizont rupture by 4-7 fold, and PfSEP-1 is a useful vaccine antigen to target schizont rupture and thereby reduce the severity of malaria.

EXAMPLE 2 Role of Phosphorylation and Protein-Protein Interaction in Schizont Egress

PfSEP-1 is involved in the process of schizont egress from P. falciparum infected RBCs. As was described above, PfSEP-1, a 244-kDa parasite antigen, localizes to the schizont/parasitophorous vacuole membrane, Maurer's clefts and the inner leaflet of the RBC membrane in schizont infected RBCs. Antibodies to a central, highly conserved 274 aa region of PfSEP-1 (rPfSEP-1A, aa 810-1083) decrease parasite replication by 58-75% (all p<0.009) by blocking schizont rupture. Active vaccination with rPbSEP-1A results in a 2.25 fold reduction in parasitemia after in vivo challenge with P. berghei. In human cohort studies, children experienced a dramatically increased incidence of severe malaria during periods with undetectable anti-PfSEP-1 antibody levels (45 cases/23,806 child weeks) compared to periods with detectable antibody levels (0 cases/1,688 child weeks; adjusted OR 4.4; Type III fixed effects p<0.01). These results demonstrate that PfSEP-1 is critical for parasite egress and that antibodies against this protein are protective in vivo against severe malaria.

Schizont egress is a complex and tightly regulated process that requires both calcium-signaling and activation of a protease cascade which processes both parasite and host RBC proteins. Central events include activation of PfPKG, release of PfSUB1 into the parasitophorous vacuole, and proteolytic processing/activation of PfSERA5 by PfSUB1. Conditional knockdown of the calcium dependent kinase PfCDPK5 also results in arrest of schizont egress. Vaccination with PfSERA5 reduces and blocks schizont egress as well as parasite invasion. An in vivo phosphorylation substrate(s) of PfCDPK-5 is PfSEP-1.

Protein-protein interactions of PfSEP-1 were studied using yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) and focusing on the rPfSEP-1A region (aa 810-1083; SEQ ID NO:2) and confirmed by immunoprecipitation of schizont extracts with anti-PfSEP-1 and sequencing (FIG. 20). PfSEP-1 was cloned into a “bait” plasmid as fusion with truncated transcription factor; malaria cDNAs were cloned into target plasmid as fusion with truncated transcription factor; screening was carried out in yeast for complementation of transcription factor via reporter gene assay; and PfSERA5 was identified as binding partner for PfSEP-1. The analysis also identified PfMESA as binding partner. These screens have identified 26 potential interacting proteins including PfSERA5, PfEMP2 (MESA), RAP-1, and RhopH3, which have also been identified as substrates for the egress critical protease PfSUB1. An immune response against SERA5 and SUB 1 sequences inhibit schizont egresss. SERA5 was identified in yeast-2-hybrid screen using PfSEP-1A as bait. rPfCDPK-5 was found to phosphorylate rPfSEP-1A (see FIGS. 20-21).

Phosphorylation-mediated regulation of PfSEP-1 and binding of this protein to both parasite and RBC proteins is essential for parasite egress. Parasite and RBC proteins which interact with, or phosphorylate PfSEP-1, are useful as vaccine antigens alone or together with PfSEP-1 (e.g., PfSEP-1A peptide) for immunization against malaria. Thus, plasmodial kinases (e.g., Pf CDPK5) and PfSEP-1-interacting proteins (e.g., PfSERA5, PfEMP2 (MESA), RAP-1, RhopH3) are used alone or as components of an PfSEP-1 based vaccine composition to generate an antibody or cellular immune response, which leads to a synergistic reduction in parasite growth, schizont egress, and (as a result) reduction in severity of malaria.

EXAMPLE 3 Transmission Blocking and Reduction of Mosquito Invasion

Gametocytes, a form of blood stage parasite, are picked up by a female Anopheles mosquito during a blood meal. PfSEP-1 is expressed in male and female gametocytes—the sexual stage of the parasite's development that forms within host red blood cells. After being taken up by the mosquito with a blood meal, gametocytes must rupture from their encasing red blood cell in a process analogous to schizont rupture. This process takes place within the gut of the mosquito. Male and female gametocytes that fail to rupture from their red blood cell cannot join to make an ookinete and thus cannot infect the mosquito.

Several transmission blocking vaccine candidates attempt to target ookinete development in the mosquito (Kaslow et al., Infect Immun 1994; 62:5576-80; Bustamante et al., Parasite Immunol 2000; 22:373-80). Because PfSEP-1 is expressed in gametocytes (FIGS. 18E-G), antibodies to PfSEP-1 taken up with the blood meal prevent gametocyte rupture from host red blood cells within the mosquito, thus affording a transmission blocking effect. Thus a vaccine that elicits an antibody immune response against PfSEP-1 (e.g., antibodies that specifically bind to PfSEP-1A) also leads to blocking of gametocyte egress out of RBCs. Antibodies made as a result of the vaccination regimen described herein readily gain access to the RBC, because the membrane permeability of infected RBCs. Thus, these data indicate that the vaccine is also useful to prevent or reduce invasion of mosquitos from a human blood meal.

EXAMPLE 4 Vaccination of Mothers and Adolescents

Maternal transmission of anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies from a mother to a fetus, e.g., across the maternal-fetal interface via the placenta, was found to reduce malaria in infants. We have identified PfSEP-1 antibodies in the sera of pregnant women whose children were protected from severe malaria during infancy (first yr of life), but do not detect anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies in pregnant women whose children do have severe malaria during infancy. Because neonates (first 28 days of life) have poorly developed immune systems, they often do not make robust immune responses to vaccines. The vaccine described herein is therefore also useful to protect infants. Pregnant women and/or women of child bearing age are immunized with a vaccine containing PfSEP-1 peptide(s). Anti-PfSEP-1 antibodies produced as a result of the immunization cross the placenta and protect the newborn from malarial infection, morbidity and mortality. Females are immunized starting at age 9, e.g., 3 doses over 6 months. Immunization of females prior to pregnancy or early in pregnancy is useful to prevent, slow, or inhibit infection and the development of malaria in fetuses and newborns.

Other Embodiments

While the invention has been described in conjunction with the detailed description thereof, the foregoing description is intended to illustrate and not limit the scope of the invention, which is defined by the scope of the appended claims. Other aspects, advantages, and modifications are within the scope of the following claims.

The patent and scientific literature referred to herein establishes the knowledge that is available to those with skill in the art. All United States patents and published or unpublished United States patent applications cited herein are incorporated by reference. All published foreign patents and patent applications cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference. Genbank, NCBI, and Plasmodb submissions indicated by accession number cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference. Plasmdb.org sequence version is the version as of Nov. 30, 2012. All other published references, documents, manuscripts and scientific literature cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference.

While this invention has been particularly shown and described with references to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention encompassed by the appended claims. 

1. A vaccine for preventing or reducing the severity of malaria comprising a composition that leads to inhibition of parasite egress from red blood cells or inhibits parasite egress from said red blood cells.
 2. The vaccine of claim 1, wherein said composition comprises a polypeptide comprising the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:2 or a nucleic acid encoding a gene product comprising SEQ ID NO:2.
 3. The vaccine of claim 1, wherein said composition comprises a polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence PfSEP1A (SEQ ID NO:2), PfSEP1 (SEQ ID NO:3), CDPK5 (SEQ ID NO:47), SERA5 (SEQ ID NO:70, 72), PfSUB1 (SEQ ID NO:74), or PfPKG (SEQ ID NO:76).
 4. The vaccine of claim 1, wherein said composition comprises a purified antigen that elicits an anti-PfSEP-1 antibody response.
 5. The vaccine of claim 1, wherein said composition comprises a purified anti-PfSEP-1 antibody or antigen binding fragment thereof.
 6. (canceled)
 7. The vaccine of claim 1, wherein said composition comprising an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO: 2, 10, 14, 18, 22, 30, 34, 38, 42, 46, 66 and
 72. 8. The vaccine of claim 1, wherein said composition comprising an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO: 3, 8, 11, 15, 19, 22, 31, 35, 39, 43, 47, 67, 70, 74, and 76 or fragments thereof.
 9. The vaccine of claim 1, wherein said composition comprising an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO: 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 30, 31, 34, 35, 28, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and 76 or an immunogenic fragment thereof.
 10. The vaccine of claim 1, wherein said composition comprising an amino acid sequence of 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 30, 31, 34, 35, 28, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and/or
 76. 11. An isolated peptide comprising a peptide having at least 90%, 95% or 99% identity with the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2; a peptide encoded by a nucleic acid sequence having at least 90%, 95% or 99% identity with the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, or any fragment thereof in a vaccine composition for treatment or prevention of P. falciparum malaria.
 12. The peptide of claim 11, wherein said peptide comprises SEQ ID NO: 3, a peptide encoded by a nucleic acid of SEQ ID NO: 4, or any fragment thereof.
 13. An isolated nucleic acid sequence comprising a nucleic acid sequence having at least 90%, 95% or 99% identity with the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 4, or any fragment thereof in a vaccine composition for treatment or prevention of P. falciparum malaria.
 14. The vaccine of claim 1, further comprising an adjuvant. 15.-22. (canceled)
 23. A purified antibody that specifically binds to an antigen comprising the amino acid sequence of 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 35, 28, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 66, 67, 70, 72, 74, and/or
 76. 